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Immunosuppression refers to the dampening of the immune response by a normal immune system to antigenic stimulation, either deliberately, or as an adverse effect of a therapeutic agent such as anti-neoplastic chemotherapy.
It can also occur when the immune system is impaired such as systemic lupus erythematosus, or diabetes.
The causes of immunosuppression may be classified as:
Systemic illnesses:
Immunosuppressive treatment
Immunosuppression is clinically indicated in three distinct situations:
Immunosuppressants are drugs which are used to intentionally suppress the production and activity of immune cells. However, these drugs also suppress the normal immune response to infectious agents, and even to emerging malignant or pre-malignant changes in cells.
Chemotherapeutic drugs also diminish the normal immune response.
An immune response has two phases, namely, an inductive and a productive phase. In the inductive phase, small lymphocytes interact with the foreign antigen. In the productive phase, the stimulated cells multiply and also stimulate more cells, as well as producing antibodies from plasma cells, depending on the nature of the cells that are stimulated.
Most immunosuppressants act by preventing the proliferation of immunocompetent cells. Thus they block the primary immune response. The secondary or anamnestic response, which depends upon already formed memory cells, is more difficult to block.
In general, immunosuppressed patients have an altered relationship with foreign antigens, including those of pathogenic microbes. This brings about the following clinically important changes:
In addition to systemic infection, the general health of these patients is weakened by many factors, such as:
Diagnosis of immunosuppression is by tests of immune function, such as:
Treatment is aimed at preventing and treating infections as early and aggressively as possible.