Title: The Human Immune System
1The Human Immune System
2What is the immune system?
- The bodys defense against disease-causing
organisms, viruses, malfunctioning cells, and
foreign particles
3The First Line of DefenseSkin
- The dead, outer layer of skin, known as the
epidermis, forms a shield against invaders and
secretes chemicals that kill potential invaders
4The First Line of DefenseMucus and Cilia
- As you breathe in, foreign particles and bacteria
bump into mucus throughout your respiratory
system and become stuck - Hair-like structures called cilia sweep this
mucus into the throat for coughing or swallowing
5The First Line of DefenseSaliva
6The First Line of DefenseStomach Acid
- Swallowed bacteria are broken down by incredibly
strong acids in the stomach that break down your
food - The stomach must produce a coating of special
mucus or this acid would eat through the stomach!
7The Second Line of DefenseThe Inflammatory
Response
- Injured body cells release chemicals called
histamines, which begin inflammatory response - Capillaries dilate
- Pain receptors activate
- WBCs flock to infected area like sharks to blood
8The Second Line of DefenseWhite Blood Cells
- If invaders actually get within the body, then
your white blood cells (WBCs) begin their attack - WBCs normally circulate throughout the blood, but
will enter the bodys tissues if invaders are
detected
9White Blood Cells Phagocytes
- These white blood cells are responsible for
eating foreign particles by engulfing them
10The Third Line of DefenseAntibodies
- Most infections never make it past the first and
second levels of defense - Those that do trigger the production and release
of antibodies - Proteins that latch onto, damage, clump, and slow
foreign particles - Each antibody binds only to one specific binding
site, known as an antigen
11Lymphocytes (white blood cells)
- T-Cells identify pathogens by its markers or
antigens - B-cells produce antibodies or proteins that
destroy the pathogen
12What is immunity?
- Resistance to a disease causing organism, virus,
or harmful substance - Two types
- Active Immunity
- Passive Immunity
13Active Immunity
- You produce the antibodies
- Your body has been exposed to the antigen in the
past either through - Exposure to the actual disease causing antigen
(chickenpox, for example) - Planned exposure to a form of the antigen that
has been killed or weakened vaccine
14Vaccine
- Antigens are deliberately introduced into the
immune system to produce immunity so body will
have antibodies ready to destroy pathogen if you
get exposed later. - Because the virus or bacteria has been killed or
weakened, minimal symptoms occur - Have eradicated or severely limited several
diseases from the face of the Earth, such as
polio and smallpox
15How long does active immunity last?
- It depends on the antigen
- Some disease-causing viruses and bacteria mutate
into new forms that our body doesnt recognize.
This requires annual vaccinations, like the
influenza (flu) shot. - Booster shot - reminds the immune system of the
antigen so youre still protected. - Others last for a lifetime, such as chicken pox
16Passive Immunity
- You dont produce the antibodies
- A mother will pass immunities on to her baby
during pregnancy - These antibodies will protect the baby for a
short period of time following birth while its
immune system develops. - Other example-rabies antibodies when you are
bitten but you must get treatment shots to cure it
17Bacterial diseases
- Bacteria are living cells and release toxins.
Your body cant kill bacteria so most must be
treated with antibiotics to kill them - Some examples are strep throat, food poisoning,
salmonella, etc.
18Viruses
- Viruses enter body cells, hijack their
organelles, and turn the cell into a virus-making
factory. The cell will eventually burst,
releasing thousands of viruses to infect new
cells.
19The Common Cold
- The common cold is caused by a virus.
- It takes hours before you start having symptoms
you are infected with a cold virus. - Your bodys immune response T cells start working
to identify the pathogen and B cells make
antibodies to immobilize it. This immobilization
process can take a week and then you feel better.
- Viruses cant be killed with antibiotics since
they are not living. You can take medicines like
acetaminophen to relieve symptoms, but they dont
shorten your cold. - The cold virus mutates often, so you will never
get the same cold again. There is no vaccine to
prevent colds.
20Aquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
- Caused by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus
- Discovered in 1983
- Specifically targets and kills T-cells
- Because normal body cells are unaffected, immune
response is not launched
21AIDSThe Modern Plague
- The HIV virus doesnt kill you it cripples your
immune system - With your immune system shut down, common
diseases that your immune system normally could
defeat become life-threatening - Can show no effects for several months all the
way up to 10 years
22HIV/AIDSThe Silent Spread
- Transmitted by blood, and fluids from infected
people through sexual contact, blood
trans-fusions, contami-nated needles. - As of 2014, an estimated 35 million people are
living with HIV/AIDS. Sadly many dont know or
arent careful, so the spread continues. - So far there is no vaccine to prevent HIV/AIDS.