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hypersensitivity

The document discusses the immune system's hypersensitivity reactions, classifying them into four types: Type I (immediate), Type II (antibody-dependent), Type III (immune complex), and Type IV (cell-mediated). Each type is characterized by distinct mechanisms, symptoms, and examples of conditions associated with them, such as allergic reactions, autoimmune diseases, and delayed responses. Treatment options vary depending on the type of hypersensitivity and may include medications like epinephrine, antihistamines, and corticosteroids.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
7 views48 pages

hypersensitivity

The document discusses the immune system's hypersensitivity reactions, classifying them into four types: Type I (immediate), Type II (antibody-dependent), Type III (immune complex), and Type IV (cell-mediated). Each type is characterized by distinct mechanisms, symptoms, and examples of conditions associated with them, such as allergic reactions, autoimmune diseases, and delayed responses. Treatment options vary depending on the type of hypersensitivity and may include medications like epinephrine, antihistamines, and corticosteroids.

Uploaded by

bodhinisalodkar
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Introduction

Generally the immune system is protective

Protective mechanisms may result in severe


damages to tissues and may lead to death
When?
Severe damages may occur when the immune
system responded in exaggerated or
inappropriate form.
Classification
Coombs and Gell classification

1-Type I - immediate ( atopic, or anaphylactic)


2-Type II - antibody-dependent
3-Type III - immune complex
4-Type IV - cell-mediated or delayed
Type I - immediate (or atopic, or anaphylactic)

Type I hypersensitivity is an allergic reaction provoked


by re-exposure to a specific antigen.

Exposure may be by ingestion, inhalation, injection,


or direct contact.

The reaction is mediated by IgE antibodies and


produced by the immediate release of histamine,
tryptase, arachidonate and derivatives by basophils
and mast cells..
This causes an inflammatory response
leading to an immediate (within seconds to
minutes) reaction.

The reaction may be either local or systemic.


Symptoms vary from mild irritation to sudden
death from anaphylactic shock.

Treatment usually involves epinephrine,


antihistamines, and corticosteroids
Some examples:
Allergic asthma
Allergic conjunctivitis
Allergic rhinitis ("hay fever")
Anaphylaxis
Angioedema
Urticaria (hives)
Type II - antibody-dependent

In type II hypersensitivity, the antibodies produced


by the immune response bind to antigens on the
patient's own cell surfaces.

The antigens recognized in this way may either be


intrinsic ("self" antigen, innately part of the patient's
cells) or extrinsic (absorbed onto the cells during
exposure to some foreign antigen, possibly as part
of infection with a pathogen
IgG and IgM antibodies bind to these antigens to
form complexes that activate the classical pathway
of complement activation for eliminating cells
presenting foreign antigens (which are usually, but
not in this case, pathogens).

As a result mediators of acute inflammation are


generated at the site and membrane attack
complexes cause cell lysis and death. The reaction
takes hours to a day.
Examples
Autoimmune haemolytic anaemia
Pernicious anemia
Immune thrombocytopenia
Transfusion reactions
Hashimoto's thyroiditis
Graves' disease
Myasthenia gravis
Farmer's Lung
Hemolytic disease of the newborn
Type III - immune complex
In type III hypersensitivity:
soluble immune complexes (aggregations of
antigens and IgG and IgM antibodies) form in the
blood and are deposited in various tissues
(typically the skin, kidney and joints)

This may trigger an immune response


according to the classical pathway of
complement activation.
The reaction takes hours to days to develop
Examples:

Immune complex glomerulonephritis


Rheumatoid arthritis
Serum sickness
Subacute bacterial endocarditis
Symptoms of malaria
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Arthus reaction
Type IV Hypersensitivity

Type IV hypersensitivity is often called


delayed type as the reaction takes two to
three days to develop.

Unlike the other types, it is not antibody


mediated but rather is a type of cell-
mediated response.
Some clinical examples:
Contact dermatitis (poison ivy rash, for example)
Temporal arteritis
Symptoms of leprosy
Symptoms of tuberculosis
Transplant rejection
The hypersensitivity reactions
Figure 12-2
TYPE I HYPERSENSITIVITY
Mechanism:
The mechanism of reaction involves preferential
production of IgE, in response to certain antigens
(allergens).
IgE has very high affinity for its receptor on mast
cells and basophils.
A subsequent exposure to the same allergen cross
links the cell-bound IgE and triggers the release of
various pharmacologically active substances
Cross-linking of IgE Fc-receptor is important in mast
cell triggering. Mast cell degranulation is preceded by
increased Ca++ influx, which is a crucial process;
ionophores which increase cytoplasmic Ca++ also
promote degranulation, whereas, agents which
deplete cytoplasmic Ca++ suppress degranulation.
Fig 1
Mast cells may be triggered by other stimuli
such as

These reactions are not hypersensitivity


reactions although they produce the same
symptoms.
TYPE II HYPERSENSITIVITY
Type II hypersensitivity is also known as cytotoxic
hypersensitivity and may affect a variety of organs
and tissues.
The antigens are normally endogenous, although
exogenous chemicals (haptens) which can attach to
cell membranes can also lead to type II
hypersensitivity.
Examples:
- Drug-induced hemolytic anemia
-Granulocytopenia
-Thrombocytopenia
Type II hypersensitivity is primarily mediated
by antibodies of the IgM or IgG classes and
complement

Phagocytes and K cells may also play a role


(ADCC).
Lab Diagnosis

Diagnostic tests include detection of circulating


antibody against the tissues involved and the
presence of antibody and complement in the
lesion (biopsy) by immunofluorescence
TYPE III HYPERSENSITIVITY
Also known as immune complex disease
occurs when immune complex (Ag-Ab) are
not removed from circulation
These complexes are deposited in various
tissues and organs such as:
- Kidneys
- Joints
- Lung
- Skin
Immune complex formation may occur as
a result of :
Autoimmune diseases (RA)
Persistence infection (Hepatitis virus)
Repeated inhalation of antigenic materials
MECHANISM
Step 1
Large quantities of
soluble antigen-
antibody complexes
form in the blood and
are not completely
removed by
macrophages.
Step 2
These antigen-
antibody complexes
lodge in the
capillaries between
the endothelial cells
and the basement
membrane.
Step 3

These antigen-
antibody complexes
activate the classical
complement
pathway leading to
vasodilatation.
Step 4

The complement proteins and antigen-antibody complexes


attract leukocytes to the area.
Step 5
The leukocytes
discharge their
killing agents and
promote massive
inflammation. This
can lead to tissue
death and
hemorrhage.
size of the immune complex, time, and place
determine if this reaction will occur or not
Localized depositions of immune complexes
within a tissue cause type III hypersensitivity
Serum Sickness

- Is
a disease caused by the injection of large doses of a
protein antigen into the blood and characterized by the
deposition of antigen-antibody complexes in blood vessel
walls, especially in the kidneys and joints.
Serum sickness
Systemic Lupus Erythmatosus
The disease is characterized by the presence
of autoantibodies , which form immune
complexes with autoantigens and are
deposited within the kidney glomeruli

The resulting type III hypersensitivity is


responsible for the glomerulonephritis
(Inflammation of blood capillary vessels in the
glomeruli)
TYPE IV HYPERSENSITIVITY
Type IV hypersensitivity is also known as cell
mediated or delayed type hypersensitivity.

The classical example of this hypersensitivity


is tuberculin (Montoux) reaction

Reaction peaks 48 hours after the injection of


antigen (PPD or old tuberculin). The lesion is
characterized by induration and erythema
Type IV hypersensitivity is involved in the
pathogenesis of many autoimmune and infectious
diseases:
Tuberculosis
Leprosy
Blastomycosis
Histoplasmosis
Toxoplasmosis
Leishmaniasis
Granulomas due to infections and foreign antigens.
Another form of delayed hypersensitivity is
contact dermatitis (poison ivy (figure 6),
chemicals, heavy metals, etc.) in which the
lesions are more papular

Type IV hypersensitivity can be classified into


three categories depending on the time of
onset and clinical and histological
presentation
Type
Fig 5
Reaction
Clinical Histology Antigen and site
time
appearance

lymphocytes, followed by epidermal ( organic chemicals,


contact 48-72 hr eczema macrophages; edema of poison ivy, heavy metals,
epidermis etc.)

local lymphocytes, monocytes, intradermal (tuberculin, lepromin,


tuberculin 48-72 hr
induratio macrophages etc.)

persistent antigen or foreign


macrophages, epitheloid and
granuloma 21-28 days hardening body presence (tuberculosis,
giant cells, fibrosis
leprosy, etc.)
Mechanism:
The mechanism includes T lymphocytes and
monocytes and/or macrophages.

The delayed hypersensitivity lesions mainly


contain monocytes and a few T cells.
Diagnosis
Diagnostic tests in vivo include delayed
cutaneous reaction (e.g. Montoux test )

In vitro tests for delayed hypersensitivity


include mitogenic response, lympho-
cytotoxicity and IL-2 production.

Corticosteroids & other immunosuppressive


agents are used in treatment.

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