| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
| Contents | ||
A vaccine (named after vaccinia, the infectious agent of cowpox, which, when inoculated, provides protection against smallpox) is used to prepare a human or animal's immune system to defend the body against a specific pathogen, usually a bacterium, a virus or a toxin. Depending on the infectious agent to prepare against, the vaccine can be a weakened bacterium or virus that lost its virulence, or a toxoid (a modified, weakened toxin or particle from the infectious agent). The act of vaccinating members of the population is also known as inoculation.
The immune system recognizes the vaccine particles as foreign, destroys them and "remembers" them. When the virulent version of the agent comes along, the immune system is prepared for a fast strike, neutralizing the agent before it can spread and multiply to vast numbers.
Live but weakened vaccines are used against tuberculosis, rabiesThis article is about the infectious disease. For the 1989 album by industrial band Skinny Puppy, see Rabies (album). Rabies (from a Latin word meaning rage , is a viral disease that causes acute encephalitis in animals and people. It can affect most spec, and smallpox; killed agents are used against choleraCholera (also called Asiatic cholera is a disease of the intestinal tract caused by the Vibrio cholerae bacterium. These bacteria are typically ingested by drinking water contaminated by improper sanitation or by eating improperly cooked fish, especially and typhoid; toxoids against diphtheriaThe clinical case definition of diphtheria is: An upper respiratory tract illness characterized by sore throat, low-grade fever, and an adherent membrane of the tonsil(s), pharynx, and/or nose. A milder form of diphtheria can also effect the skin. Diphthe and tetanusTetanus is a serious and often fatal disease caused by the exotoxin tetanospasmin which is produced by the Gram-positive, anaerobic bacterium Clostridium tetani''. It was first documented by Hippocrates, and records dating back to the 5th century BCE prov.
Vaccines, though they are by far not as virulent as the "real" agent, can have unpleasant side effects, and have to be renewed every few years. A new attempt to avoid these obstacles of "classic" vaccination is DNA vaccinationDNA vaccination is a proposed experimental technique for protecting an organism against disease by injecting it with naked DNA to produce an immunological response. Thus far, no experimental trials have evoked a response sufficiently strong enough to prot. The DNADeoxyribonucleic acid DNA is a nucleic acid which carries genetic instructions for the biological development of all cellular forms of life and many viruses. DNA is sometimes referred to as the molecule of heredity as it is inherited and used to propagate coding for a part of a virus or a bacterium that is recognizable by the immune system is inserted and expressed in human/animal cells. These cells now produce the toxoid for the infectious agent, without the effects other parts of a weakened agent might have. As of 2003, DNA vaccination is still experimental, but shows some promising results.