* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download What could have caused this?
Schistosomiasis wikipedia , lookup
Onchocerciasis wikipedia , lookup
Meningococcal disease wikipedia , lookup
Leptospirosis wikipedia , lookup
Whooping cough wikipedia , lookup
History of biological warfare wikipedia , lookup
Visceral leishmaniasis wikipedia , lookup
African trypanosomiasis wikipedia , lookup
Eradication of infectious diseases wikipedia , lookup
Bioterrorism wikipedia , lookup
Aim: How does your body become immune (resistant) to disease? Bioterrorism Today there is mounting concern about the threat of a bioterrorist Fatal hemorrhagic attack using smallpox -- sosmallpox muchin a twelve-year-old girl, 1970s, concern that in October 2001 theBangladesh. A genetically engineered strain of smallpox American government decided to might produce unusual order enoughsymptoms vaccines to protect such as these. Here, every U.S. citizen. the eyes are filled with blood, and blood reputation, blisters form in the Smallpox has a fearsome mouth and in inside the body. having killed more people history than How disease. can we protect ourselves? any other infectious What is a vaccine? Antigen Weakened Pathogen Antibody A vaccine is a dose of a pathogen or part of a pathogen that has been disabled or destroyed so it is no longer harmful, but it still has the antigens present. These antigens trigger an immune response. How was the first Vaccine developed? English physician Edward Jenner developed an inoculation against smallpox in 1796. Armed with the knowledge that milkmaids who had been exposed to cowpox, a relatively mild affliction, didn't come down with smallpox, Jenner intentionally infected an eightyear-old boy with cowpox. Two months later he infected the boy again, this time with smallpox. As Jenner expected, the child didn't come down with the disease -- he was immune. What happens when you get invaded by the real pathogen? Memory Cells Memory cells recognize the real pathogen quickly and immediately produce the antibodies to fight it; and you won’t experience the sickness What is immunity? • The ability of a person who once had a disease to be protected from getting the same disease again. She was very ugly! The ugliest one in our community. She went to the beauty parlor so often She built up an immunity. Immune response Antibody Concentration Real Pathogen Interval between exposures Vaccine First exposure Second exposure Time Vaccines How are these two types of immunity different? Active vs. Passive immunity • Active Immunity • You make your own antibodies to fight the pathogen • Long lasting • Passive Immunity • You get antibodies from a different organism, you don’t make your own antibodies • Short lasting