Fever is considered a non-specific response to infection because it can be triggered by a wide range of pathogens, including bacteria, viruses, and fungi, as well as other inflammatory stimuli. It is part of the body's general immune response, aimed at creating an environment less favorable for pathogens and enhancing the effectiveness of immune cells. Since fever can occur in response to various types of infections and conditions, it does not pinpoint a specific disease or pathogen. Instead, it serves as a broad indicator of the body's fight against infection or inflammation.
Inflammation is a nonspecific defense reaction to tissue damage caused by injury or infection. It involves the body's immune response to fight off pathogens, clear away damaged cells, and promote tissue repair.
The immune response is how your body recognizes and defends itself against bacteria, viruses, and substances that appear foreign and harmful.The inflammatory response (inflammation) occurs when tissues are injured by bacteria, trauma, toxins, heat, or any other cause.
Immunity provides protection against specific foreign antigens, displays memory, and it requires distinction between self and non self antigen.
Feeling cool is a non-example of fever
Antibodies are non specific! That is why antibody testing does not signify anything specific except that an immune response is on progress. Processed flour will give you an immune response and show elevated liver enzymes that are typical during times of infection
The human immune system can be separated into three "lines of defense" 1) Tthe first line includes physical barriers-primarily the skin, and biochemical barriers-mucous, sweat, stomach acids, wax, oil ect. This is considered a non-specific response because the response is not different for different pathogens. 2) The second line includes the inflammatory response, natural killer cells, macrophages, and fever. This level of defense is also considered non-specific. 3) The third line includes the two specific defenses-your humoral or antibody mediated immune response and your cell mediated immune response. In both cases your body is responding to a particular antigen or infectious agent.
Specific immunity follows a non-specific response. The major difference between specific and non-specific is the ability to remember pathogenic antigens. Specific immunity results in the production of memory cells which upon reinfection are used to effectivly remove the pathogen Non-specific cannot do this
Q Fever
called a non-specific defense
When I worked as a nurse in Pediatrics we used Ibuprofen for fevers. It would bring them down in a hurry.More detail:The only way antibiotics would help reduce a fever is to fight the infection causing the fever - but only if it's an infection causing it. But the NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflamatory drugs), such as Ibuprofen, aspirin, etc., bring fever down by dilating the blood vessels, helping to release the heat.
yes
Campbell O'Donnell has written: 'On the longevity of stimulus-response and non-specific priming'