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Ebba Hoeger

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3y ago

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What must a vaccination contain to make it effective in producing immunity?

A vaccination must contain either a weakened or inactivated form of the disease-causing pathogen, or specific pieces of the pathogen such as proteins or genetic material. This prompts the body's immune system to recognize and remember the pathogen, allowing it to quickly mount a response if the person is exposed to the actual pathogen in the future.


What is the name of the process when a person is immunised against a disease by injecting them with an inactive form of a pathogen?

The process is called vaccination. It involves injecting a person with a harmless form of a pathogen, such as a dead or weakened virus or bacteria, to stimulate the immune system to produce an immune response without causing the disease.


How do humans develop active immunity by articial and natural means?

Humans can develop active immunity naturally through exposure to a pathogen, which triggers an immune response and the production of antibodies. Artificially, active immunity can be induced through vaccination by administering weakened or inactivated forms of a pathogen, prompting the immune system to produce memory cells for future protection against that specific pathogen.


What is active acquired immunity?

Active acquired immunity occurs when you get an infection by a pathogen (bacteria, virus) and your body responds and removes the pathogen and also your body makes "memory" cells. These cell remember this pathogen and when it enters your body again you remove it immediately. You are now immune to it. You usually don't notice this.


What is a carrier of an agent capable of causing disease?

A carrier is an individual who harbors an infectious agent but does not show symptoms of the disease themselves. They can unknowingly transmit the agent to others, contributing to the spread of the disease in a population.

Related Questions

What would happen if an individual receives a vaccination containing a weakened pathogen?

Sometimes they will develop mild flu like symptoms and have a low grade fever. With the weakened your body will recognize the pathogen and develop antibodies against it, so your reaction would be milder then contracting the actual illness.


How a vaccination prevents disease in the individual who receives a vaccination?

Vaccination works by introducing a harmless component of a pathogen, such as a protein or inactivated virus, into the body. This stimulates the immune system to recognize the pathogen and produce specific antibodies and memory cells without causing the disease. If the vaccinated individual later encounters the actual pathogen, their immune system can quickly respond by producing the necessary antibodies, effectively preventing infection or reducing the severity of the disease.


You are given a what when you are inoculated with a weakened pathogen?

vaccine or vaccination


What best describes how a vaccinations can help protect the body against disease?

An individual is exposed to a killed pathogen, an inactivated pathogen, or a component of a pathogen. The individual is protected from subsequent exposures to the pathogen because the adaptive immune system is stimulated to produce memory B cells and memory T cells, which protect from subsequent exposures.


Which pathogen is commonly linked with salads containing tcs food?

Listeria cytogenses is the pathogen that is commonly linked with salad containing tcs food.


The process of vaccination?

Vaccination is the process of attempting to confer artificial immunity on an individual organism by exposing the immune system to antigens of the pathogen being vaccinated against. Vaccination does not provide nearly as good protection as natural, or acquired immunity.


Which is not a reason to seek addtional vaccination or immunizations against a pathogen?

Risk of exposure is low


What do you get if you wanted to boost your immune response to a specific pathogen?

You'd most likely want to expose yourself to a "dead" version of that pathogen via vaccination.


What must a vaccination contain to make it effective in producing immunity?

A vaccination must contain either a weakened or inactivated form of the disease-causing pathogen, or specific pieces of the pathogen such as proteins or genetic material. This prompts the body's immune system to recognize and remember the pathogen, allowing it to quickly mount a response if the person is exposed to the actual pathogen in the future.


True or false Vaccination triggers an immune response against the pathogen by simulating an infection?

True


Does active immunity involve a person becoming immune to a pathogen as a result of having a disease?

by vaccination


How active vaccination protect the body against disease?

Active vaccination produces antibodies against the particular organism. These antibodies kill the invading pathogen and protect the body against the disease.