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Study Guide 11 - Innate Immunity
Study Guide 11 - Innate Immunity

... → Contain a site of damage  → Localize the response  → Restore tissue function  iii. Factors that initiate the inflammatory response:  → Microbial cell products detected by toll‐like receptors  → Microbial surfaces (trigger the complement cascade)  iv. Tissue damage  ...
EPB PHC 6000 EPIDEMIOLOGY FALL, 1997
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... diseases, migrants begin to assume disease rates of the host country in just in a few generations. This provides strong evidence for the influence of environmental factors since ...
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Nature Immunology: Changes to mitochondrial metabolism allow the

... published in Nature Immunology. The study findings could help in the design of vaccines and provide new pharmacological targets for the treatment of infections and inflammatory metabolic disorders. Microorganisms contain specific molecules that are detected as danger signals by the cells of the immu ...
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European Respiratory Society Annual Congress 2013
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... and Chief Executive Officer, will present at the 35 Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference on Tuesday, January 10, 2017 at 10:00 a.m. PT. The conference will be held at the Westin St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco, CA. A live webcast of the presentation will be available by visiting the Investors ...
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... adaptive (specific) arm of the immune-response. Problems related to a poor capacity to recognize and eliminate infectious agents such as viruses are sometimes related to the incapacity of the immune response to recognize the foreign antigens and initiate an efficient specific immune-response. For th ...
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... produce antigens which match the pathogens antigens (markers) 5. Special types of White Blood Cells called memory cells are produced so when you come in contact with the real pathogen they REMEMBER IT and produce antibodies SO FAST you don’t get sick; this is immunity. ...
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How stress affects anxiety, fatigue and chronic illness

... music, massage, and just smiling itself can increase NK cell activity. And many NK cell-enhancing strategies can reduce the effects of stress as studies of the immune enhancing supplement AHCC have shown. AHCC (Active Hexose Correlated Compound) is made from a fermented extract of a hybrid of mushro ...
- Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
- Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology

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Hygiene hypothesis

In medicine, the hygiene hypothesis is a hypothesis that states that a lack of early childhood exposure to infectious agents, symbiotic microorganisms (e.g. gut flora or probiotics), and parasites increases susceptibility to allergic diseases by suppressing the natural development of the immune system. In particular, the lack of exposure is thought to lead to defects in the establishment of immune tolerance.The hygiene hypothesis has also been called the ""biome depletion theory"" and the ""lost friends theory"".
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