Immunology � ��
Allergy and Hypersensitivity
Introduction
When?
Severe damages may occur when the immune system responded in exaggerated or inappropriate form.
Classification
1-Type I - immediate ( atopic, or anaphylactic)
2-Type II - antibody-dependent
3-Type III - immune complex
4-Type IV - cell-mediated or delayed
��
Type I - immediate (or atopic, or anaphylactic)
Some examples:
Type II - antibody-dependent
Examples
Type III - immune complex
In type III hypersensitivity:
Examples:
Type IV Hypersensitivity
Some clinical examples:
Figure 12-2
The hypersensitivity reactions
TYPE I HYPERSENSITIVITY
Mechanism:
Fig 1
-Exercise,
-Emotional stress
-Chemicals (e.g., photographic developing medium, calcium ionophores, codeine, etc.),
-Anaphylotoxins (e.g., C4a, C3a, C5a, etc.).
TYPE II HYPERSENSITIVITY
Examples:
- Drug-induced hemolytic anemia
-Granulocytopenia
-Thrombocytopenia
Lab Diagnosis
Diagnostic tests include detection of circulating antibody against the tissues involved and the presence of antibody and complement in the lesion (biopsy) by immunofluorescence
TYPE III HYPERSENSITIVITY
MECHANISM� Step 1
Large quantities of soluble antigen-antibody complexes form in the blood and are not completely removed by macrophages.
Step 2
These antigen-antibody complexes lodge in the capillaries between the endothelial cells and the basement membrane.
Step 3
These antigen-antibody complexes activate the classical complement pathway leading to vasodilatation.
Step 4
The complement proteins and antigen-antibody complexes attract leukocytes to the area.
Step 5
The leukocytes discharge their killing agents and promote massive inflammation. This can lead to tissue death and hemorrhage.
size of the immune complex, time, and place determine if this reaction will occur or not
Localized depositions of immune complexes within a tissue cause type III hypersensitivity
Serum Sickness
��
�
- Is a disease caused by the injection of large doses of a protein antigen into the blood and characterized by the deposition of antigen-antibody complexes in blood vessel walls, especially in the kidneys and joints.
Serum sickness
Systemic Lupus Erythmatosus
(Inflammation of blood capillary vessels in the glomeruli)
TYPE IV HYPERSENSITIVITY
Fig 5
Type | Reaction time | Clinical appearance | Histology | Antigen and site |
contact | 48-72 hr | eczema | lymphocytes, followed by macrophages; edema of epidermis | epidermal ( organic chemicals, poison ivy, heavy metals, etc.) |
tuberculin | 48-72 hr | local induratio | lymphocytes, monocytes, macrophages | intradermal (tuberculin, lepromin, etc.) |
granuloma | 21-28 days | hardening | macrophages, epitheloid and giant cells, fibrosis | persistent antigen or foreign body presence (tuberculosis, leprosy, etc.) |
Mechanism:
Diagnosis