Acquired immunity
Acquired immunity | |
---|---|
Term | Acquired immunity |
Short definition | acquired immunity (uh-KWY-erd ih-MYOO-nih-tee) type of immunity that develops when a person's immune system reacts to a foreign substance or microorganism, or that occurs after a person has received antibodies from another source. The two types of acquired immunity are adaptive and passive. |
Type | Cancer terms |
Specialty | Oncology |
Language | English |
Source | NCI |
Comments |
acquired immunity - (pronounced) (uh-KWY-erd ih-MYOO-nih-tee) type of immunity that develops when a person's immune system reacts to a foreign substance or microorganism, or that occurs after a person has received antibodies from another source. The two types of acquired immunity are adaptive and passive. Adaptive immunity occurs in response to infection with or vaccination against a microorganism. The body makes an immune response that can prevent future infection with the microorganism. Passive immunity occurs when a person receives antibodies to a disease or toxin instead of making them through their own immune system
External links
- Medical encyclopedia article on Acquired immunity
- Wikipedia's article - Acquired immunity
This WikiMD article is a stub. You can help make it a full article.
Languages: - East Asian
中文,
日本,
한국어,
South Asian
हिन्दी,
Urdu,
বাংলা,
తెలుగు,
தமிழ்,
ಕನ್ನಡ,
Southeast Asian
Indonesian,
Vietnamese,
Thai,
မြန်မာဘာသာ,
European
español,
Deutsch,
français,
русский,
português do Brasil,
Italian,
polski