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The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

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The Human Immune System
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Page 1: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

The Human Immune System

Page 2: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

What is the Immune System?

Page 3: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

What is the immune system?

The body’s defense against disease causing organisms, malfunctioning cells, and foreign invaders.

Page 4: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Foreign Invaders

Called Pathogens Viruses, bacteria, or other living

things causing disease/immune response

Antigens Toxins that pathogens produce that

cause harm to an organism

Page 5: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Parts of the Immune System

1. Blood- white blood cells 2. Lymph nodes3. Thymus Gland- Produces T lymphocytes

4. Bone Marrow- Produces B Lymphocytes

Page 6: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Components of Human Immune System Parts of the Immune

System

Page 7: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Blood Cells

Page 8: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?
Page 9: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

How does the body fight infection/foreign invaders?

The Body has THREE lines of Defence

Page 10: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

The Immune System Defense

Page 11: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

First Line of Defence

Provides Physical and Chemical barriers:

1. Physical Barrier – hard to penetrate, made of indigestible keratin

2. Chemical Barrier– tears, sweat

Page 12: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

The First Line of DefensePhysical barrier ~Skin~

- The dead, outer layer of skin, known as the epidermis, forms a shield against invaders and secretes chemicals that kill potential invaders

- You shed between 40 – 50 thousand skin cells every day!

Page 13: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

- 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

The First Line of DefensePhysical Barrier ~ Mucus and Cilia~

Don’t swallowed bacteria have a good chance of infecting you?

Page 14: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

The First Line of Defense~Saliva~

What’s the first thing you do when you cut your finger?

- Saliva contains many chemicals that break down bacteria

- Thousands of different types of bacteria can survive these chemicals, however

Page 15: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

- 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!

The First Line of Defense~Stomach Acid~

Page 16: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Escherichia Coli (E.Coli)

- is common and plentiful in all of our digestive tracts. Why are we all not sick?

- These bacteria are technically outside the body and aid in digesting material we cannot

- Only if E.Coli are introduced in an unnatural manner can they break through the first line of defense and harm us

Page 17: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

The Immune System Defense

Page 18: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

These white blood cells are responsible for eating foreign particles by engulfing them

Once engulfed, the phagocyte breaks the foreign particles apart in organelles called lysosomes

White Blood Cells~Phagocytes~

Page 19: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Second Line of DefenseWhite Blood Cells

~T-Cells~ T-Cells, often called

“natural killer” cells, recognize infected human cells and cancer cells

T-cells will attack these infected cells, quickly kill them, and then continue to search for more cells to kill

Page 20: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

- Injured body cells release chemicals called histamines, which begin inflammatory response

- Capillaries dilate- Pyrogens released,

reach hypothalamus, and temperature rises

- Pain receptors activate

- WBCs flock to infected area like sharks to blood

The Second Line of Defense~The Inflammatory Response~

Page 21: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

The Immune System Defense

Page 22: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Third Line of Defence – Specific Immune Response

This is a specific response to a specific pathogen/antigen

The response involves the reaction of Antibodies

Page 23: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

- 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

The Third Line of Defense~Antibodies~

Page 24: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Antibody Production- WBCs gobble up

invading particles and break them up

- They show the particle pieces to T-cells, who identify the pieces and find specific B-cells to help

- B-cells produce antibodies that are equipped to find that specific piece on a new particle and attach

Page 25: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Antibodies are Proteins that Recognize Specific Antigens

Page 26: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Viruses 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.

Cell before infection… …and after.

Page 27: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

HIV Virus vs. AIDS~The Modern Plague~

- HIV is a virus.- HIV virus attacks T cells- When the T cells are damaged in large

numbers this causes your immune system to shut down (AIDS- acquired immune deficiency)

- So the HIV virus doesn’t 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

- Therefore a person could have HIV in their cyctem and no effects for several months all the way up to 10 years

Page 28: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

AIDS~The Silent Spread~

Transmitted by: Infected body

fluids Breast milk

of infected mother

Infected blood

As of 2007, it affects an estimated 33.2 million people

Page 29: The Human Immune System. What is the Immune System?

Video

Discovery Channel - Body StorySpreading Menace

While eating at a friend’s birthday party, Mike ingests Salmonella bacteria and falls ill. Follow the trail of the invading microbes through the digestive system from the mouth to the lower intestine and examine the body’s formidable arsenal of weapons designed to combat these tiny terrors. 15min

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3JGXWoXBnc


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