Clinical Laboratory Technician, Basic Immunology and Serology Exam. Instructional Materials: Clinical Immunology and Serology, A laboratory Perspective, 3rd Ed. 2009 Christine Dorresteyn Steven, McGraw-Hill
Course ID: CL 1110
National American University
Memory is involved.
Lymphocytes play a major role.
It is very specific.
It depends on normally present body functions.
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Acts as an opsonin
Binds hemoglobin
Causes vasodilation
Helps to form clots
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Haptoglobin
Ceruloplasmin
Fibrinogen
Alpha-2 macroglobulin
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Attenuation of a harmful substance
Natural immunity
Passive immunity
Cross-immunity
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Increase rapidly in response to infection
Used to diagnose a specific disease
Enhanced phagocytosis
Promote inflammation
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Acts as an opsonin
Forms clots
Binds hemoglobin
Acts as a chemotaxin
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To determine risk of a heart attack
To determine flare up of rheumatoid arthritis
To detect an inflammatory process
All of the above
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Nonspecific
Immediate response
Depends on neutrophils and macrophages
Involves memory
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Latex particles are coated with anti-CRP
Latex particles are coated with CRP
Latex particles are nonspecifically bound
CRP is acting as an antibody
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Autoimmunity
Natural immunity
Acquired immunity
Alloimmunity
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Bone marrow
Spleen
Lymph node
Peyer's patches
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Class switch
Affinity maturation
Apoptosis
Differentiation
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MHC class I
IgG
IgM
MHC class II
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Thymus
Bone marrow
Lymph node
Spleen
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Expresses beta chains and pre Ta
Does not express T-cell receptor or CD3
Co-expresses CD4 and CD8
Is normally found in lymph nodes
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T-cell receptor on the effector cell binding to Fab of IgG bound to the target cell
C-type lectin inhibitory receptors on effector cell binding to class I on target cell
CD16 on the effector cell binding to Fc of IgG to the target cell
CD154 on the effector cell binding to CD40 on the target cell
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They interact with CD8 and T cells
They have an alpha chain and beta-2 microglobulin
They have alpha and beta chains of equal size
They combine with antigen made inside the cell
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They are recognized by helper T cells.
They are found on all nucleated cells
They combine with exogenous antigen
They are coded for on chromosome 9
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Found in unrelated plants or animals but cross-react with the same antibody
One's own self-antigens
Any antigen used for immunization
All of the above
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RBCs
All nucleated cells
B cells and macrophages
Stem cells only
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Class I
Class II
Class III
No MHC molecule is necessary for antigen recognition
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Expressed codominantly
Involved in antigen recognition
Members of the immunoglobulin superfamily
Expressed constitutively on all nucleated cells
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C1
C2
Factor B
C3
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IgG
Mannose-Binding Lectin
C3b
C1q
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C1q, C1r, C1s
C4, C2
C5, C3
C5, C6, C7, C8
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C1q
C4
C5b6789
Mannose-Binding Lectin
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IgA and IgD
IgM only
IgG and IgM
IgG only
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IgA
IgD
IgE
IgM
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32
16
64
Cannot determine
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0.25 mL
2 mL
0.5 mL
1 mL
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Lack of chemical hygiene
A sharps hazard
The chain of infection
A specimen transport problem
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1:3
1:4
1:5
3:1
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Handling a urine specimen from a patient with a bacterial infection very carefully
Wearing gloves in handling a serum specimen from a patient with HIV
Taking gloves off in the lab to place a serum specimen in a chemistry analyzer
Treating every specimen in the lab as if it were infectious
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Postzone
Prozone
Equivalence zone
Zone of equivalence
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Precipitation
Agglutination
Flocculation
Neutralization
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Equivalence zone
Postzone
Prozone
Prezone
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Prozone
Postzone
Equivalence zone
All of the above
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Bone marrow to the cortex, after thymic education, released back to peripheral circulation
Storage in either the cortex or medulla, release of T cells into the peripheral circulation
Maturation and selection occur in the cortex, then the medulla, release of mature T cells to secondary lymphoid organs
Activation and selection occur in the medulla, mature T cells stored in the cortex until activated by antigen
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Decreasing the strength of the current
Changing the pH of the buffer
Increasing the strength of the current
All of the above
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Immunofixation
Immunoelectrophoresis
Double diffusion
Passive agglutination
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Immunofixation electrophoresis
Immunoelectrophoresis
Oucherlony diffusion
Rocket immunodiffusion
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Soluble antigen
Cellular antigens
Red blood cells
Radioactive antigen
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To link small antigens on patient red cells
To enhance agglutination with IgG coated red blood cells
To enhance agglutination with IgM coated red blood cells
To cause a precipitation reaction with small amounts of antibody
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Homeogeneous EIA
Competitive EIA
Sandwich EIA
ELISA
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Sandwich
Competitive
ELISA
Homogeneous
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Competitive
Sandwich
ELISA
Homogeneous
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Precipitation
Agglutination
Flocculation
Neutralization
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Latex agglutination
Hemagglutination
Neutralization
Complement fixation
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