Immunization
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Transcript Immunization
Chapter 15
Care of the Patient with an Immune
Disorder
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Care of the Patient with an Immune
Disorder
In response to attack, the body exhibits a wide array
of adaptations designed to provide a defense and
protect the body from external and internal harmful
agents
The immune system has three functions:
– Protect the body’s internal environment against
invading organisms
– Maintain homeostasis by removing damaged cells from
the circulation
– Serve as a surveillance network for recognizing and
guarding against development and growth of abnormal
cells
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Immunity
Quality of being insusceptible to or unaffected
by a particular disease or condition
– Innate (natural) – body’s first line of
defense provides physical and chemical
barriers to invading pathogens and protects
against the external environment
– Adaptive (acquired) – body’s second line of
defense provides a specific reaction to each
invading antigen and can remember the
antigen causing the attack
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Effects of Aging on the Immune
System
Decline in the immune system
High incidence of tumors in older adults
Greater susceptibility to infections such as
influenza and pneumonia
Bone marrow is relatively unaffected
Delayed hypersensitivity response is
frequently decreased or absent, results in an
increased risk of cancer mortality
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Immune Response
There are two ways of assisting the body to
develop immunity:
– Immunization – controlled exposure to a
disease-producing pathogen develops
antibody production while preventing disease
– Immunotherapy – a special treatment of
allergic responses that administers
increasingly large doses of the offending
allergens to gradually develop immunity
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Origin and Processing of B & T Cells
(Figure 15-3)
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Failure of the Immune Response
Severity of altered immune response
disorders range from mild to chronic to life
threatening:
– I – Hypersensitivity disorder – involves
allergic response and tissue rejection
– II – Immunodeficiency disease – involves
altered and failed immune response
– III – Autoimmune disease – involves
extensive tissue damage resulting from an
immune system that seemingly reverses its
function to one of self-destruction
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Hypersensitivity Disorder
Hypersensitivity disorder – involves
allergic response and tissue rejection
– Treatment:
Symptom management with medications
Environmental control
Immunotherapy
– Nursing Diagnosis
Risk for injury, related to exposure to allergen
Activity intolerance, related to malaise
Risk for infection, related to inflammation of
protective mucous membrane
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Hypersensitivity Disorder
Anaphylaxis or Systemic Reaction
– Most severe allergic reaction - reaction
may be fatal very rapidly within seconds to a
few minutes
Transfusion reaction
– Hypersensitivity to mismatched blood
Delayed Hypersensitivity
– Reactions may occur 24 – 72 hours after
exposure
Transplant Rejection
– Immune response to foreign protein
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Immunodeficiency Disease
Immunodeficiency disease – involves
altered and failed immune response
– Primary immunodeficiency –
Phagocytic
B cell deficiency
T cell deficiency
Combined b cell and t cell deficiency
– Secondary immunodeficieny
Drug – induced (most common) treatment for
prevention of transplant rejection
Stress, hypofunctional state, malnutrition,
radiation, Hodgkin’s
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Autoimmune Disease
Autoimmune disease – involves extensive
tissue damage resulting from an immune
system that seemingly reverses its function to
one of self-destruction
– Unknown reasons – immune cells that are
normally unresponsive (tolerant to selfantigens) are activated
– Rheumatoid arthritis
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Nursing Diagnoses
Risk for injury,
related to exposure
to allergen
Activity intolerance,
related to malaise
Risk for infection,
related to
inflammation of
protective mucous
membranes
Breathing patterns,
ineffective, related
to edema,
bronchospasm and
increase secretions
Cardiac output,
decreased, related
to increased
capillary
permeability and
vascular dilation
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