Type III immunopathological reaction
Type III immunopathologic reaction, based on immunocomplex formation (type III reaction, Arthus type), is a humoral imunopathologic reaction. Partially it is similar to atope, but is causes by IgG antibodies. In this reaction an antibody together with the antigen forms immunocomplexes. This depends on the amount of, size, structure, physical-chemic properties, if the immunocomplexes get phagocytosed, or if they are stored in tissues.
Principle[edit | edit source]
Immunocomplexes either bind to Fc-receptors, or activate complement triggering a cascade of damaging reactions, where neutrophils) play a major role, & mast cells play a supportive role. As a result an inflammatory response develops (which can proceed to to chronicity).
The reaction time is long. The reaction does not occur until a sufficient amount of antibodies is produced, which is after approximately 2 weeks. The transient immunocomplex reaction leads to the removal of the infectious agent by a physiological mechanism.
Manifestations accompany most acute infections (pain of joints, muscles etc.). A pathologic reactions occurs when there is an excessive amount of antigen. Immunocomplexes most frequently accumulated in the kidneys, on the surface of endothelium, and in joint synovium.
Symptoms include glomerulonephritis, vaskulitis, and artritis. The so called serum sickness develops after the administration of the therapeutic xenogennic serum.
Arthus's reaction is an experimenal model of the serum sickness. It involves sensitizing an animal with an antigen and subsequently inducing a local reaction after applying an intradermal injection containing the antigen.
Examples of diseases[edit | edit source]
- Serum sickness.
- Exogennous alergic alveolitis / Farmers lungs: IgG agianst various inhalatory antigens (e.g fungal components of hay).
- Systemic lupus erythematodes: autoimmune, autoantigenic components of the cell nucleus.
- Cryoglobulinemia: immunocomplex consists of pathologic and normal (physiologic) imunoglobulins.
- Reumatoid arthritis: in some symptoms, the immunocomplexes are made up of reumatoid factors, that are antibodies against Fc-fragments of other antibodies.
- Sterile consequence of infectious diseases: in susceptible individuals, after infections, damage to tissues can occur. This damage can even have an autoimmune character. The following can develop: poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis, endocarditis with rheumatoid arthritis, postinfectious arthritis up to chlamydial, Salmonella, Shigella diseases in indiivduals with HLA-B27.
- Arthus phenomenon – local necrosis in the area of repeated antigen injections.
Prognosis[edit | edit source]
Most immunocomplex reactions regress and disappear after the source of the antigen is destroyed. Only in the case of autoantigens (SLE) worsening and chronic damage can occur.
Links[edit | edit source]
Related articles[edit | edit source]
- Allergy
- Type I immunopathological reaction
- Type II immunopathological reaction
- Type IV immunopathological reaction
External links[edit | edit source]
Used literature[edit | edit source]
- HOŘEJŠÍ, Václav – BARTŮŇKOVÁ, Jiřina. Základy imunologie. 3. edition. Praha : Triton, 2008. 280 pp. ISBN 80-7254-686-4.