Natural
Defenses
The
skin and mucous membranes form the body's first line
of defense against disease. Most microscopic pathogens,
or microbes, cannot pass through unbroken skin, although
they can easily enter through cuts and other wounds.
Mucous membranes protect internal organs that are connected
with the outside of the body. These membranes, which
line the respiratory, digestive, urinary, and reproductive
tracts, secrete a sticky fluid called mucus, which traps
microbes. The mucus may then be expelled from the body,
perhaps in a cough or sneeze or in feces. If the mucus
is swallowed, digestive juices kill the microbes.
Small hairlike projections on the lining of the nose,
throat, and bronchial tubes work in conjunction with
mucus to trap and remove foreign substances. In the
ears, tiny hairs plus a sticky wax defend against the
entry of germs. Tears secreted by the lachrymal gland
wash away germs and other small objects that may enter
the lid area of the eye. Tears also contain a protein
that kills certain germs.
If a pathogen breaches the bodys outer barriers,
the defenses of the immune system spring into action.
Some of these defenses are effective against a variety
of invaders, while others are tailor-made to fight a
specific organism. White blood cells called phagocytes
constantly travel through the bloodstream on the lookout
for foreign objects. If they come upon a microorganism,
they surround, engulf, and digest it.
If the infection persists and there are too many organisms
for the phagocytes to fight by themselves, the immune
system produces proteins called antibodies. Each antibody
is designed to combat a particular antigen, or foreign
protein. Two types of white blood cells are involved
in this process. B cells release the antibody, which
attaches to the outer covering of the antigen, marking
it for destruction. T cells attack the tagged antigen
and also stimulate B cells into action. Once the body
has produced antibodies to a specific microorganism,
it generally is immune to future invasions by that organism.
That is why people who have had chicken pox or measles
as a child will not get the disease again as an adult.
The reason people get one cold after another is that
each cold is caused by a different virus strain.
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