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The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.
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The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

The Immune System and Allergy

William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Page 2: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Overview of Human Immunity

Page 3: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Innate Immunity

• Barrier defenseSkinMucous membranesSecretions

• Internal defensesPhagocytic cellsAntimicrobial proteinsInflammatory responseNatural Killer (NK) cellsComplement

Page 4: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Adaptive (Acquired) Immunity

• Humoral responseAntibodies

In body fluids

• Cell-mediated responseLymphocytes (cells)

In body cells

Page 5: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Acquired ImmunityAntigen detection by B lymphocyte

• B cell receptors

2 heavy and 2 light chains

Antigen binding site

Page 6: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Acquired Immunity Antigen detection by T lymphocyte

• T cell receptorAlpha chain and Beta chain

Bind only to antigens presented to T cells by a host protein produced by genes from the MHC

Page 7: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

B and T cell Interaction

• Antigen presenting cell (dendritic cells, macrophages, and B cells) interact with T helper cell

• Activated T cell binds to B cell

• Activated B cells become plasma or memory B cells

• Secreted antibody from

plasma cells

Page 8: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Antibodies

• Differ from B cell receptors only in the constant (C) region of the heavy chain

• The five major types of heavy chain constant regions determine the five major classes of antibodies (M, G, A, E, and D)

• Changes in the heavy chain gene that switch B cells from producing one antibody class to another occur only in response to antigen stimulation and specific regulatory signals from T cells (cytokines cause isotype switching)

Page 9: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Allergy

• An exaggerated immune response to certain antigens (allergens)

• Overproduction of IgE antibody specific to the allergen

• IgE binds to mast cells in the connective tissue of certain organs like the skin, nose, eyes, and lung.

• Recontact with the allergen binds the IgE on the mast cell and cause cells to degranulate releasing histamine and other mediators

Page 10: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Example of an Allergic Response

Page 11: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Why do people become allergic?

Page 12: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Contact with Allergens

Page 13: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Conditions caused by Allergy

• Anaphylaxis – whole body, more than 1 organ system, life threatening

Caused by bee venom, foods including peanuts, tree nuts, and seafood, and medications

Treated with epinephrine (EpiPen)

Page 14: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Conditions caused by Allergy

• Allergic rhinitis (nose) – sneezing, runny nose, stuffiness, itching

• Allergic conjunctivitis (eye) – watery, red, itching

Perennial – dust mite, mold, animal dander

Seasonal – mold, pollen (tree, grass, weed)

Page 15: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Conditions caused by Allergy

• Asthma – an inflammatory condition of the lung caused by allergy 60-85% of the time

Cough, wheezing, shortness of breath

Triggers – see below

Page 16: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Other Allergy Conditions

• Food allergy – can cause skin (eczema or hives), gastrointestinal, or systemic symptoms (anaphylaxis)

Page 17: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Other Allergy Condtions

• Bee venom allergy

• Drug allergy

• Latex allergy

• Contact allergy – nickel

• Skin allergy – eczema or urticaria (hives)

Page 18: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Eczema

Page 19: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Urticaria (Hives)

Page 20: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Diagnosis of Allergy

• History – type of symptoms, timing and duration, family history, past history

• Physical examination

• Testing – Skin testing– RAST or ImmunoCap (blood)

Page 21: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Skin Testing

Page 22: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Skin Testing

Page 23: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Allergy Treatment

• Allergen Avoidance

• Medication

• Allergen Immunotherapy (Allergy Shots)

Page 24: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Allergen Avoidance

• Dust mites – bedding encasings, furnace filters, air cleaners, remove feather/down, remove stuffed animals

• Animals – remove

• Mold – clean, reduce humidity

Page 25: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Medication

• Antihistamine

• Decongestants

• Inhalers

• EpiPen

Page 26: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

New epinephrine injectors

• Auvi - Q

Page 27: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Allergen Immunotherapy

• SCIT – subcutaneous (shot)

• SLIT – sublingual (drops under tongue)

Page 28: The Immune System and Allergy William L. Houser, Jr., M.D.

Questions