Immunodeficiency Diseases: Professor Shahenaz M.Hussien
Immunodeficiency Diseases: Professor Shahenaz M.Hussien
Immunodeficiency Diseases: Professor Shahenaz M.Hussien
DISEASES
PROFESSOR SHAHENAZ M.HUSSIEN
IMMUNODEFICIENCY
IMMUNODEFICIENCY DISORDERS:
DISORDERS:
Aim
Aim of
of the
the lecture:
lecture:
At
At the
the end
end of
of this
this lecture
lecture the
the student
student will
will be
be able
able
to
to describe
describe the
the clinical
clinical features
features and
and diagnose
diagnose
humoral
humoral andand cellular
cellular immune
immune deficiency,
deficiency, and
and
acquired
acquired immunedeficiency
immunedeficiency Syndrome
Syndrome (AIDS).
(AIDS).
Immune
Immune deficiency
deficiency diseases:
diseases:
Definition:
Definition:
Deficiencies
Deficiencies ofof host
host defense
defense systems
systems result
result in
in an
an
immunologic
immunologic imbalance
imbalance that
that can
can lead
lead toto aa
susceptibility
susceptibility to to infection,
infection, anan autoimmune
autoimmune
disease,
disease, or
or aa predisposition
predisposition toto malignancies.
malignancies.
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Types of immunodeficiency disorders:
1- Primary: Causes in immune system component:
a. According of component:
i. Complements. ii. Phagocytic. iii. B cells. iv. T Cells.
b. According to the etiology:
i. Congenital (X-linked disease) ii. Acquired (AIDS)
iii. Embryogenesis (Digoerge syndrome). iv. Idiopathic
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A) B-cell defect:
• Causative agents are most commonly extracellular
organisms, namely pyogenic and enteric bacteria,
because patients are deficient in serum opsonins
(antibodies) necessary for phagocytosis.
• Patients with X-linked (Bruton) agammaglobulinemia
may also have problems with certain enteric viruses
(e.g., polio virus, echo virus, coxsackicvirus).
• Patients with IgA deficiency or common variable
hypogammaglobulinemia are by Giardia lamblia
parasite.
• Sites of infection include the skin, sinuses, meninges,
and the respiratory, urinary, and gastrointestinal
tracts. 4
B-Cell Deficiency Disorders
Therapy Clinical Features Disorder
Immune serum Recurrent pyogenic infections; 1- X-linked agammaglobu-
globulin; antibiotics infections of lungs, sinuses, middle linemia (Bruton disease)
ear, skin, central nervous system
Antibiotics; immune Recurrent pyogenic infections; 2-Transient hypogamma-
serum globulin frequent in families with other globulinemia of infancy (1st
(selected patients) immunodeficiencies 3 years of life)
Antibiotics; immune Recurrent infections of lungs, 3-Selective immuno-
serum globulin (IgG sinuses; gastrointestinal disease; globulin deficiency
subclass deficiencies allergy; frequent in families with (IgA, IgM, IgG sub
only) common variable classes)
immunodeficiencies
Immune serum Infections of lungs, sinuses, middle 4-Immunoglobulin defi
globulin; antibiotics ear; increased frequency of ciency with increased IgM
autoimmune disease Ectodermal (and IgD)
displasea
Immune serum Infections of lungs, sinuses, middle 5-Common variable
globulin; antibiotics ear; giardiasis; malabsorption; immunodeficiency
autoimmune disease 5
(B) T-cell deficiency disorders, also known as cell-mediated (cellular)
immunodeficiencies, result from abnormalities in T-cell functions.
Antibody production is also likely to be affected in patients with
severe T-cell abnormalities because T cells are important
immunoregulators of B-cell differentiation and function.
*Recurrent infections --Causative agents are intracellular pathogens
(e.g., herpesviruses, mycobacteria, fungi {Candida}, and protozoa
{Pneumocystis carinii, Toxoplasma}.
--Sites of infection include a variety of sites, both local and systemic.
*Congenital cell-mediated immunodeficiencies represent a complex
spectrum of immunodeficiencies. At one extreme are defects in
lymphoid stem cell differentiation, which result in severe
combined immunodeficiency disorders. At the other extreme are
isolated defects that affect only cell-mediated immunity to one
particular pathogen (e.g., chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis).
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T-Cell and Combined Deficiency
Therapy Clinical Features Disorder
Bone rn,irrow transplantation Recurrent infections; wasting; chronic diarrhea; failure *Severe combined immuno
Antibiotics and IVIG to thrive: graft versus host disease, anemia, Alopacia deficiency
* Nezelof syndrome
Bone marrow transplan Recurrent infections; dysostosis (adenosine deaminase Defects of the purine sal
tation; enzyme deficiency); anemia and mental retardation vage pathway
replacement therapy (purinenucleoside phosphorylase deficiency) -Adenosine deaminase
Rib and Scapula abnormality in ADA deficiency
-Purine nucleoside
phosphorylase deficiency
Thymus graft or thymosin Hypoparathyroidism (hypocalcemia); facial *DiGeorge anomaly (third
therapy) abnormalities; cardiovascular abnormalities; infections; and fourth pouch/arch
mental deficiency (some patients); gastrointestinal tract syndrome)
malformation (some patients).
Topical and systemic Chronic candidal infection of the skin, nails, scalp, and *Chronic mucocutaneous
antifungal agents; transfer mucous membranes; autoimmune endocrine disorders candidiasis
factor; thymus transplantation Intestinal malabsorption recurrent infections
Bone marrow transplantation Oculocutaneous telangictasia; progressive cerebellar *Ataxia-telangiectasia
ataxia; bronchiectasis, malignancy; defective
chromosomal repair; raised a-fetoprotein
Bone marrow transplantation; Eczema; thrombocytopenia; susceptibility to *Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
antibiotics; splenectomy infections; malignancy; small, defective platelets
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ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY
SYNDROME (AIDS( Infection
Definition:
It is a disorder associated with a profound deficiency in T-cell
immunity, and, in children, T-cell and B-cell abnormalities.
Etiology and Pathogenesis:
Causative agent and mechanisms of transmission HIV-1, a
retrovirus, is the cause of AIDS.
Transmission
(1) Approximately 85% of childhood HIV infections occur because of
perinatal transmission from an HIV-infected mother to her newborn.
The average risk of perinatal transmission is such that 20%-25% of
babies born to infected mothers will become infected. There is
evidence that a large proportion of perinatal infections occur at
parturition. Breast feeding can also transmit HIV infection to an
infant.
(2) Transmission to recipients of blood, blood products, or organ
transplantation.
(3) Adolescents acquire infection via sexual contact and intravenous
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drug abuse.
IMMUNOLOGIC ABNORMALITIES
1. Progressive depletion of CD4 T cells (helper-
induced T cells)
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(B) Prophylaxis for P. carinii pneumonia
• Prophylaxis is recommended for all perinatally exposed
infants from 6 weeks to 12 months of age, or until immune
status has been clarified.
• For infected children 12 months to 6 years of age, prophylaxis
is given if the CD4 T-cell number is less than 500/u.l;
• For children older than 6 years, prophylaxis is given when the
CD4 T-cell number is less than 200/u.l.
• The drug of choice is trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole
(TMP-SMX), which is given 3 times a week. Dapsone is used
in children who do not tolerate TMP-SMX.
PREVENTION
(A) Decreasing the number of births to HIV-infected women.
(B) Treating HIV-infected mothers during pregnancy and
delivery with ZDV.
(C) No effective vaccine against HIV infection is likely to be
available.
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