Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Autoimmune disorder

An autoimmune disease is a condition in which tissue injury is caused by T cell or antibody reactivity to self.

The immune activation may be initiated by infection, but then persist in the absence of any detectable microbial antigen. Autoimmune diseases are a family of more than 100 illnesses that develop when underlying defects in the immune system led to the body to attack its own organs, tissues and cells.

The diseases can be confusing and is probably when many people aren’t family with autoimmune disease or are unsure which illnesses fall into this category.

Furthermore, the names of these condition, which include Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjogren’s syndrome, celiac disease and multiple sclerosis, among other don’t have the word ‘autoimmune’ in them.

Pathologic autoreactivty or autoimmune disease is often accompanied by credited immune competence, with an increased susceptibility to both infection and malignancy.

It is striking that whole each autoimmune disease individually affects only a small number of people. The prevalence of all autoimmune disease is approximately 5-7%.

Because a complete cure is not available for nearly every one of these 100 autoimmune diseases, patients face a lifetime of illness and treatment.

Because most of these diseases disproportionately afflict women, and are among the leading causes of death for young and middle-aged women, they impose a heavy burden on patents’ families and on society.
Autoimmune disorder

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