Kidneys filter out liquid waste and then you pee.
The respiratory system works with the immune system by releasing oxygen, which helps you breathe and is like a filter to your body.
bladder
If you want to know the answer go look it up on the book Human Anatomy
Toll-like receptors are part of the innate immune system.
The immune system is responsible for protecting the body against foreign substances like bacteria, viruses, and toxins. It does this by identifying and destroying pathogens that can cause harm to the body. Through a complex network of cells, tissues, and organs, the immune system works to keep the body healthy and defend against infection.
The body fights diseases through the immune system, which includes specialized cells like white blood cells and antibodies. When pathogens such as bacteria or viruses enter the body, the immune system recognizes them as foreign invaders and works to eliminate them to protect the body from illness.
The function of the immune system is to protect your body from infection by pathogens and foreign invaders, or what the body perceives as invading "germs". Your immune system works to identify pathogens and sometimes other unrecognized cells, like tumor cells, that could cause disease and then to eliminate them from your system. Your body's immune system has an incredibly difficult task in this because some of these pathogens can be "sneaky": they can redesign (mutate) themselves to trick the immune system into misidentifying them as harmless cells rather than appropriately treating them as foreign invaders.
Immunologists study the immune system, which is responsible for defending the body against pathogens and diseases. They research how the immune system works, how it can go wrong in conditions like autoimmune diseases, allergies, and immunodeficiencies, and how it can be manipulated to treat or prevent diseases.
The immune system is the body's defense mechanism against pathogens like bacteria, viruses, and parasites. It works to identify and neutralize these potentially harmful invaders to protect the body from infections and diseases. The immune system includes various cells, tissues, and organs that work together to mount a response against foreign substances.
Epilepsy is not an infection or a virus or anything like that, so the immune system is not relevant to it. You cannot "catch" epilepsy from someone. So the immune system does not respond to epilepsy. There is nothing that it can do.
Exercise stresses your immune system. Too little exercise has very little effect on your immune system, whereas too much exercise can debilitate your immune system. Therefore, like medication, the proper dose of exercise is required; if it is neither too little nor too strenuous, regular exercise can boost your immune system. .
IF the immune system is strengthened the person is less susceptible to obtaining infections like pneumonia which can cause death if they don't have a fully functioning immune system