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Principles Underlying Vaccination
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səhifə | 2/4 | tarix | 14.06.2023 | ölçüsü | 0,71 Mb. | | #130270 |
| Vaccines
Principles Underlying Vaccination - Concept of Immunity
- Self vs. Non-self
- Antigen specificity
- Indicated by presence of effector cells
- Protection from infectious diseases using above methods
Vaccinations - Boosters (multiple inoculations) are required
- Interference of passive maternal antibodies
Effectiveness of Vaccinations - Small percentage of recipients will respond poorly
- Role of genetic determinants
- Herd Immunity
- Majority of population is immune, so chance of susceptible individual contacting infected individual is low
- Measles Epidemic
Herd Immunity - Factors affecting herd immunity
- Environmental Factors: crowded conditions, seasonal variations
- Strength of Individual’s Immune System
- Infectiousness of Disease: greater the risk of infection, the higher percentage of people need vaccines to attain herd immunity
- When enough people are vaccinated, chance of germ infecting the non-immunized population is small
- Can lead to disappearance of diseases (smallpox)
- Vaccination no longer necessary
Quantitative Data Further Proof of the Effectiveness of Vaccines Development of Vaccines - Common misconception that activation of the immune system results in protective immunity
- Multiple factors affect decisions when making vaccines
- 1. Activation of specific branch of immune system
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- 2. Development of immunological memory
Role of Memory Cells - Depends on incubation period of pathogen
- Short Incubation Periods
- ex. Influenza
- Symptoms already under way by the time memory cells are activated
- Repeated immunizations with neutralizing antibodies
- Long Incubation Periods
- ex. Poliovirus
- Enough time to allow memory B cells to respond
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