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Immunotherapy and Prevention
Immunotherapy and Prevention

... phenol. Inactivated virus vaccines used in humans include those against rabies (animals sometimes receive a live vaccine considered too hazardous for humans), influenza, and polio (the Salk poliovaccine). Inactivated bacterial vaccines include those for pneumococcal pneumonia and cholera. Several lo ...
Lecture 9
Lecture 9

... Use part of pathogen OR Use genetic engineering to manufacture pathogen protein No danger of infection Hepatitis A & B, Haemophilus influenza type b, pneumonoccocal conjugate vaccines ...
IMMUNISATION lecture - Turing Gateway to Mathematics
IMMUNISATION lecture - Turing Gateway to Mathematics

... •Estimate the current burden of seasonal influenza by age for high and low risk groups •Build a transmission model that incorporates • the necessary age groups, separately for high and low risk people • captures the seasonal patterns by age and subtype (H1, H3 and B) under the existing programme • p ...
Immunizations What you need to know
Immunizations What you need to know

... In 2000 Ireland reported an increase in measles cases from 148 to 1,200 due to a decline in the measles immunization coverage. Several children died due to the complications of measles. ...
Hepatitis B Vaccination Waiver
Hepatitis B Vaccination Waiver

... If you would like to receive the Hepatitis B vaccine, please read and sign the following: “I have read or have had explained to me the information on the Hepatitis B VACCINE INFO STATMENT. I have had a chance to ask questions which were answered to my satisfaction. I believe I understand the benefit ...
Why aren`t they always effective?
Why aren`t they always effective?

...  Natural infections persist within the body for a long time so the immune system has time to develop an effective response, ...
Functional genomics as a tool to define a molecular signature of
Functional genomics as a tool to define a molecular signature of

... FMDV vaccines • Inactivated virus vaccines • No cross-protection between serotypes • Multivalent vaccines to provide protection against the different serotypes • Challenge tests are needed to establish a PD50 (50% protective dose) value or protection • Challenge experiments requires appropriate bio ...
Friday, August 7, 2015
Friday, August 7, 2015

... Active Immunity: the result of exposing the body to the infection. This process can be achieved either by way of natural immunity, exposing the body to the actual disease, or by vaccineinduced immunity. Vaccine-induced immunity is when the body is Antibody: immunoglobulin that the exposed to either ...
Peter Hotez Statement: Curbing The Ebola Outbreak
Peter Hotez Statement: Curbing The Ebola Outbreak

... ultimately turn the curve downward, WHO has adopted a goal of “70-70-60” meaning that 70% of the people killed by Ebola need to be buried safely, and we need to get 70% of those with the disease treated in a hospital like setting within 60 days. From my perspective that is the roles of the US and no ...
Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering
Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering

... FLU/ ...
Infectious Diseases and Immune-compromised People
Infectious Diseases and Immune-compromised People

... Because immune-compromised conditions result from different causes, the recommendations about vaccinations vary. Affected individuals should discuss vaccines with their healthcare provider. However, the general rule of thumb is that in most cases, immune-compromised individuals can safely receive in ...
Document
Document

... immune system and leave a child more susceptible to other diseases. Based upon your knowledge of the mechanisms of the immune system, explain why this fear is unfounded. ...
VACCINOLOGY
VACCINOLOGY

... make up the surface capsule of certain bacteria • The immune response to a pure polysaccharide vaccine is typically T-cell independent, which means that these vaccines are able to stimulate Bcells without the assistance of T-helper cells. ...
Development of recombinant DNA technolgy
Development of recombinant DNA technolgy

... amounts at low cost by introducing the gene into microorganisms and growing them to produce the drug. In addition to urokinase, more than one hundred useful materials are now produced using recombinant DNA technology. Generally, microorganisms, such as E. coli and yeast, and animal cells, such as Ch ...
innate and adaptive immune responses of catfish antigen
innate and adaptive immune responses of catfish antigen

... catfish APCs, DCs, macrophages, and B cells. Currently, we are evaluating the possible role of Langerin/CD207-positive cells in the protective immunity to E. ictaluri vaccines by immunohistochemistry. The function of professional phagocytes, macrophages, to produce nitric oxide in response to live a ...
Cholera
Cholera

Study Guide For Immune System Test, Chapter 40
Study Guide For Immune System Test, Chapter 40

... 1. What are the functions of B-lymphocytes, T-lymphocytes, and macrophages? 2. What is the difference between an antigen and an antibody? 3. How does acquired immunity work in a natural way (chicken pox) and when a vaccine is used (polio)? 4. What is the difference between a virus cell and a bacteri ...
Vaccination against diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough
Vaccination against diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough

... Tetanus is caused by a bacteria present in soil. The bacteria produce toxins that attack the nervous system causing muscle stiffness and painful cramps. Infection can occur when the bacteria enter open wounds and it is not contagious. The disease has a high death rate.. Tetanus is less common in Sca ...
vaccination
vaccination

... e.g. Rabies virus vaccine, MMR (Measles, Mumps and Rubella) BCG (Bacillus Calmette Guerin vaccine for Mycobacterium tuberculosis Risk it could revert back to infectious agent will stimulate both cell mediated and antibody mediated immune responses ...
BME 301 - Rice University
BME 301 - Rice University

... Use genetic engineering to manufacture pathogen protein No danger of infection Hepatitis A & B, Haemophilus influenza type b, pneumonoccocal conjugate vaccines ...
11.1 Defence against infectious disease – summary
11.1 Defence against infectious disease – summary

... antigens stimulate an immune response; antibodies are produced in response to antigens; antibodies are specific to antigen; antibodies are made by B-cells / lymphocytes / plasma cells; antigen is engulfed by macrophages; antigen is presented on macrophage membrane; helper T-cells bind to antigen (on ...
Live attenuated vaccines - WHO Vaccine Safety Basics
Live attenuated vaccines - WHO Vaccine Safety Basics

... Available since the 1950s, live attenuated vaccines (LAV) Live attenuated vaccine (LAV)A vaccine prepared from living micro-organisms (viruses, bacteria currently available) that have been weakened under laboratory conditions. LAV vaccines will replicate in a vaccinated individual and produce an imm ...
Vaccine
Vaccine

... *Types of immune response to vaccines Vaccines containing killed pathogens (such as hepatitis A or the Salk polio vaccine) or antigenic components of pathogens (such as hepatitis B subunit vaccine) do not enter host cells, thereby eliciting a primary B cell mediated humeral response. These antibodi ...
Introduction
Introduction

... only the antigens that best stimulate the immune system. • In some cases, these vaccines use epitopes—the very specific parts of the antigen that antibodies or T cells recognize and bind to. • Because subunit vaccines contain only the essential antigens and not all the other molecules that make up t ...
New Treatments
New Treatments

... Center of Molecular Immunology 1st lung cancer vaccine Cimavax Not a cure: survival of patient - helps immune system - therapeutic vaccine ...
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Vaccine



A vaccine is a biological preparation that provides active acquired immunity to a particular disease. A vaccine typically contains an agent that resembles a disease-causing micro-organism and is often made from weakened or killed forms of the microbe, its toxins or one of its surface proteins. The agent stimulates the body's immune system to recognize the agent as a threat, destroy it, and keep a record of it, so that the immune system can more easily recognize and destroy any of these micro-organisms that it later encounters.The administration of vaccines is called vaccination. The effectiveness of vaccination has been widely studied and verified; for example, the influenza vaccine, the HPV vaccine, and the chicken pox vaccine. Vaccination is the most effective method of preventing infectious diseases; widespread immunity due to vaccination is largely responsible for the worldwide eradication of smallpox and the restriction of diseases such as polio, measles, and tetanus from much of the world. The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that licensed vaccines are currently available to prevent or contribute to the prevention and control of twenty-five infections.Vaccines can be prophylactic (example: to prevent or ameliorate the effects of a future infection by any natural or ""wild"" pathogen), or therapeutic (e.g., vaccines against cancer are also being investigated; see cancer vaccine).The terms vaccine and vaccination are derived from Variolae vaccinae (smallpox of the cow), the term devised by Edward Jenner to denote cowpox. He used it in 1798 in the long title of his Inquiry into the...Variolae vaccinae...known...[as]...the Cow Pox, in which he described the protective effect of cowpox against smallpox. In 1881, to honour Jenner, Louis Pasteur proposed that the terms should be extended to cover the new protective inoculations then being developed.
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