- imitation (literary genre)
Samuel Johnson: The Gentleman’s Magazine and early publications of Samuel Johnson: London is an “imitation” of the Roman satirist Juvenal’s third satire. (A loose translation, an imitation applies the manner and topics of an earlier poet to contemporary conditions.) Thales, the poem’s main speaker, bears some resemblance to the poet Richard Savage, of whom Johnson knew and with whom…
- imitation (music)
counterpoint: , melodic imitation) between the voice parts.
- Imitation de Notre-Dame la lune, L’ (work by Laforgue)
French literature: The Decadents: …Les Complaintes (1885; “Lamentations”) and L’Imitation de Notre-Dame la Lune (1886; “Imitation of Our Lady of the Moon”), are a series of variations on the Decadent themes of the flight from life, woman, and ennui, each explored through a host of recurring images (the wind, Sundays, moonlight, and the tragicomic…
- Imitation Game, The (film by Tyldum [2014])
Benedict Cumberbatch: From Star Trek to Alan Turing: …and logician Alan Turing in The Imitation Game, a drama that also featured Keira Knightley. For his performance, Cumberbatch received an Academy Award nomination for best actor. Also in 2014 he voiced an animated wolf in the comedy Penguins of Madagascar and reprised his role as Smaug in The Hobbit:…
- imitation leather (material)
leather: Artificial leather: Some of the earliest leather substitutes were invented in the 19th century. Nitrocellulose (guncotton) was developed by German chemist Christian Friedrich Schönbein in 1845 and was later turned into collodion (pyroxylin) in 1846 by French scientist Louis-Nicolas Ménard. Collodion was used as a…
- Imitation of Christ (devotional book)
Imitation of Christ, a Christian devotional book written between 1390 and 1440. Although its authorship is a matter of controversy, the book is linked to the name of Thomas à Kempis. Whatever the identity of the author, he was a representative of the devotio moderna (q.v.) and its two offshoots,
- imitation of Christ (religion)
Christianity: The problem of suffering: …specifically Christian idea of the imitation of Christ. Individual Christians are called to follow the example of Christ; incorporation into the body of Christ is granted to those who are ready to carry out within themselves Christ’s destiny of suffering, death, and resurrection. The early church’s characterization of the Christian…
- Imitation of Life (film by Stahl [1934])
John M. Stahl: Imitation of Life (1934) was a well-mounted adaptation of Hurst’s drama about racism and single parenthood, as told through the friendship of two women—one white (Claudette Colbert), the other African American (Louise Beavers); the film received an Academy Award nomination for best picture. In 1935…
- Imitation of Life (film by Sirk [1959])
Douglas Sirk: From All That Heaven Allows to Imitation of Life: …the stir brought about by Imitation of Life (1959), the last of Sirk’s expressionist tours de force, which was based on a novel by Fannie Hurst that had been filmed earlier (1934) by Stahl. Sirk’s version starred Lana Turner as an actress and uninterested mother whose daughter (Sandra Dee) is…
- Imittós, Óros (mountain, Greece)
Mount Hymettus, limestone mountain southeast of Athens (Modern Greek: Athína), Greece. With a peak elevation of 3,366 ft (1,026 m), the 11-mi- (18-km-) long ridge is divided into two small series of peaks by the gorge of Pirnari in the southwest. The ancient quarries of Kara marble are located near
- Imja River (river, Nepal)
Mount Everest: Drainage and climate: …which flows southward as the Imja River to its confluence with the Dudh Kosi River. In Tibet the Rong River originates from the Pumori and Rongbuk glaciers and the Kama River from the Kangshung Glacier: both flow into the Arun River, which cuts through the Himalayas into Nepal. The Rong,…
- IML-1 (space mission)
Roberta Bondar: …payload specialist for the first International Microgravity Laboratory Mission (IML-1), a crewed Spacelab module aimed at investigating the effects of weightlessness on living organisms and materials processing. She flew into space as a payload specialist on the Discovery space shuttle during the STS-42 mission, launching into space on January
- Imlach, Punch (Canadian ice-hockey coach)
Toronto Maple Leafs: …team led by head coach Punch Imlach and packed with future Hall of Famers (right wing and centre George Armstrong, goaltender Johnny Bower, centre Red Kelly, centre Dave Keon, defenseman Tim Horton, left wing Frank Mahovlich, left wing Bob Pulford, and defenseman
- immacolata (religious art)
Madonna: The immacolata, which in the 17th century emphasized her Immaculate Conception, or perpetual freedom from original sin, shows her as a young girl descending from the heavens, supported by a crescent moon and crowned by stars. The Madonna of the rosary, which until the 16th century…
- Immaculate Conception (Roman Catholicism)
Immaculate Conception, Roman Catholic dogma asserting that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was preserved free from the effects of the sin of Adam (usually referred to as “original sin”) from the first instant of her conception. Although various texts in both the Old and the New Testaments have been
- Immaculate Conception (painting by Murillo)
Bartolomé Esteban Murillo: …broad brushwork of the 1652 Immaculate Conception reflect direct visual contact with the art of the 16th-century Venetians and the Flemish Baroque painters. The St. Leandro and St. Isidoro (1655) are even further removed from the simple naturalism of his earlier Franciscan saints. These seated figures, more than life size,…
- Immaculate Conception (work by El Greco)
El Greco: Later life and works of El Greco: …of the Madonna in the Immaculate Conception (1607–14), originally in the Church of San Vicente, floats heavenward in a paroxysm of ecstasy supported by long, distorted angels. The fantastic view of Toledo below, abstractly rendered, is dazzling in its ghostly moonlit brilliance, and the clusters of roses and lilies, symbols…
- Immaculate Conception School (university, Seattle, Washington, United States)
Seattle University, private, coeducational institution of higher education in Seattle, Washington, U.S. It is affiliated with the Jesuit order of the Roman Catholic church. It offers about 50 undergraduate degree programs and about 20 graduate degree programs; professional degrees are also
- Immaculate Reception, the (football history)
Franco Harris: …came to be know as the Immaculate Reception. The play occurred with 22 seconds remaining in the game and the Steelers trailing 7–6. On fourth-and-10 from the Steelers’ 40-yard line, Pittsburgh’s quarterback, Terry Bradshaw, threw a pass that was deflected toward the ground by a Raider defender before Harris appeared…
- Immaculée Conception, L’ (work by Breton and Éluard)
André Breton: L’Immaculée Conception (1930), written with Paul Éluard, attempted to convey a verbal impression of different types of mental disorder. Les Vases communicants (1932; “The Communicating Vessels”) and L’Amour fou (1937; “Mad Love”) explored the connection between dream and reality. Breton also wrote theoretical and critical…
- immanence (philosophy and theology)
immanence, in philosophy and theology, a term applied, in contradistinction to “transcendence,” to the fact or condition of being entirely within something (from Latin immanere, “to dwell in, remain”). Its most important use is for the theological conception of God as existing in and throughout the
- Immanent Will (philosophical concept)
Thomas Hardy: Poetry: …force that he called the Immanent Will. Though subsequent criticism has tended to find its structures cumbersome and its verse inert, The Dynasts remains an impressive—and highly readable—achievement, and its publication certainly reinforced both Hardy’s “national” image (he was appointed to the Order of Merit in 1910) and his enormous…
- Immanuel Ben Solomon (Hebrew poet)
Immanuel Ben Solomon was a Hebrew poet who lived mainly in Rome and is considered the founder of secular poetic writing in Hebrew. Probably a wandering teacher by profession, he was a prolific writer of Hebrew verse, both sacred and secular (some of the latter being highly erotic), which he
- Immanuel Church (church, New Castle, Delaware, United States)
New Castle: The Immanuel Church (Episcopal; 1703, rebuilt after it burned in 1980) is a historic landmark. Other colonial landmarks include Amstel House Museum (c. 1730); Old Dutch House, perhaps the state’s oldest dwelling, built in the late 1600s and now maintained as a museum; the New Castle…
- immature teratoma (tumor)
teratoma: Epidemiology and pathology: …those that are classified as immature (cancerous) tend to occur more frequently in children.
- immaturity (geology)
sedimentary rock: Texture: Immature sandstones contain a clay matrix, and the sand-size grains are usually angular and poorly sorted. This means that a wide range of sand sizes is present. Such sandstones are characteristic of environments in which sediment is dumped and is not thereafter worked upon by…
- immediate compellence (international relations)
compellence: Diplomatic, or immediate, compellence involves verbal threats and promises. Shows of force also assist this kind of coercion; realist scholars note that most diplomacy is underwritten by the unspoken possibility of military action. Demonstrative compellence involves a limited use of force coupled with the threat…
- immediate constituent analysis (linguistics)
immediate constituent analysis, in linguistics, a system of grammatical analysis that divides sentences into successive layers, or constituents, until, in the final layer, each constituent consists of only a word or meaningful part of a word. (A constituent is any word or construction that enters
- immediate emancipation (American and European social movement)
William Lloyd Garrison: “Immediatism,” however variously it was interpreted by American reformers, condemned slavery as a national sin, called for emancipation at the earliest possible moment, and proposed schemes for incorporating the freedmen into American society. Through The Liberator, which circulated widely both in England and the United…
- Immediate Family (photography by Mann)
Sally Mann: …of black-and-white portraits, entitled “Immediate Family,” was unveiled in the spring of 1992 at Houk Friedman, a gallery in New York City. Those photographs created a stir because they focused on her three children, who often appeared nude and in postures, situations, and settings that some viewers found disturbing.…
- immediate hypersensitivity (physiology)
anaphylaxis, in immunology, a severe, immediate, potentially fatal systemic allergic reaction to contact with a foreign substance, or antigen, to which an individual has become sensitized. Food allergies are the most common triggers of anaphylaxis, followed by drugs and insect bites and stings.
- immediate toxic response (pathology)
poison: Immediate versus delayed toxic responses: …exposure, the response is considered immediate. There is no universal standard of minimum time for delayed toxic responses, but generally a response that takes more than a few days to develop is considered delayed. The time it takes for a systemic toxicant to act depends on many factors, such as…
- immediatism (American and European social movement)
William Lloyd Garrison: “Immediatism,” however variously it was interpreted by American reformers, condemned slavery as a national sin, called for emancipation at the earliest possible moment, and proposed schemes for incorporating the freedmen into American society. Through The Liberator, which circulated widely both in England and the United…
- Immelmann turn (aerial maneuver)
air warfare: Through World War I: …what became known as the Immelmann turn, in which an attacking fighter dove past the enemy craft, pulled sharply up into a vertical climb until it was above the target again, then turned hard to the side and down so that it could dive a second time. Fighters operated at…
- Immelmann, Max (German aviator)
air warfare: Through World War I: The German ace Max Immelmann, in exploiting the superior abilities of his Fokker Eindeker to climb and dive quickly, helped expand aerial combat from the horizontal into the vertical dimension. Immelmann developed what became known as the Immelmann turn, in which an attacking fighter dove past the enemy…
- Immense Journey, The (work by Eiseley)
extraterrestrial life: Searching for technical civilizations: …words of Loren Eiseley (from The Immense Journey [1957]),
- Immensee (work by Storm)
Theodor Woldsen Storm: …most important early works is Immensee (1850; Eng. trans., 1863), a moving story of the vanished happiness of childhood, which, like so many of his works, is coloured by a haunting nostalgia. As his writing matured his novellas displayed subtler psychological insight, greater realism, and a wider scope of themes—including…
- Immermann, Karl Leberecht (German author)
Karl Leberecht Immermann was a dramatist and novelist whose works included two forerunners in German literary history: Die Epigonen as a novel of the contemporary social scene and Der Oberhof as a realistic story of village life. The son of a civil servant, Immermann interrupted his legal studies
- immersed tube (engineering)
immersed tube, technique of underwater tunneling used principally for underwater crossings. The method was pioneered by the American engineer W.J. Wilgus in the Detroit River in 1903 for the Michigan Central Railroad. Wilgus dredged a trench in the riverbed, floated segments of steel tube into
- immersion (Christian baptism)
Baptist: Contents: …were led to insist upon immersion as the apostolic form of the rite.
- immersion foot (medical disorder)
immersion foot, a painful disorder of the foot involving damage to the skin, nerves, and muscle that is caused by prolonged exposure to cold dampness or by prolonged immersion in cold water. See
- immersion frying (cookery)
french fries: …then typically fried in a deep fryer. The oil causes french fries to be high in fat, which is linked to cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Flavouring with salt also poses risks to the heart. Amid growing health concerns, many fast-food chains, including McDonald’s, stopped using oil that contains trans fat
- immersion objective (optics)
microscope: Optics: An immersion objective requires a liquid, usually a transparent oil of the same R.I. as glass, to occupy the space between the object and the front element of the objective.
- Immigrant Press and Its Control, The (work by Park)
Robert E. Park: In The Immigrant Press and Its Control (1922), Park argued that foreign-language newspapers would, in the long run, promote assimilation of immigrants. Three volumes of his Collected Papers, edited by Everett C. Hughes and others, were published between 1950 and 1955. The second volume deals with…
- immigration
immigration, process through which individuals become permanent residents or citizens of another country. Historically, the process of immigration has been of great social, economic, and cultural benefit to states. The immigration experience is long and varied and has in many cases resulted in the
- Immigration Act (United States [1924])
eugenics: Eugenics organizations and legislation: …ultimately led to a new immigration law in 1924 that severely restricted the annual immigration of individuals from countries previously claimed to have contributed excessively to the dilution of American “good stock.”
- Immigration Act (United States [1965])
United States: The Great Society: The Immigration Act of 1965 abolished the discriminatory national-origins quota system. The minimum wage was raised and its coverage extended in 1966. In 1967, social security pensions were raised and coverage expanded. The Demonstration Cities and Metropolitan Area Redevelopment Act of 1966 provided aid to cities…
- Immigration Act of 1882 (United States [1882])
Chinese Exclusion Act, U.S. federal law that was the first and only major federal legislation to explicitly suspend immigration for a specific nationality. The basic exclusion law prohibited Chinese labourers—defined as “both skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining”—from
- Immigration and Nationality Act (United States [1952])
Amy Coney Barrett: …term “public charge” in the Immigration and Nationality Act (1952), which would greatly reduce the number of immigrants granted admission to or legal permanent residency in the United States, was not unreasonable. Scholarly analyses of her time on the Seventh Circuit found her to be among the most conservative judges…
- Immigration and Naturalization Service (United States agency)
cybercrime: Counterfeiting and forgery: …had been missed by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). Finally, a 2002 report by the GAO reported that more than 90 percent of certain types of benefit claims were fraudulent and further stated that immigration fraud was “out of control.” Partially in response to these revelations, the INS was…
- immigration control
Channel Tunnel: In June–July 2015 the problem of migrants—many of them from eastern Africa—sneaking aboard vehicles on trains in an attempt to immigrate to the United Kingdom reached crisis proportions. During that period at least nine individuals were killed while trying to make their way to England via the tunnel. The…
- Immigration Restriction Act (Australia [1901])
Australia: The Chinese: …newly formed government was the Immigration Restriction Act of 1901. This legislation, known as the “White Australia” policy, was specifically designed to end Asian migration to the country in order to maintain a “white” population. It severely limited the size of Chinese communities in Australia for more than 50 years,…
- Immingham (dock system, England, United Kingdom)
Immingham, dock system 6 miles (10 km) north of Grimsby, unitary authority of North East Lincolnshire, Eng. It was built in 1912 on the southern shore of the Humber Estuary, where the deep water enabled vessels to enter and leave unaided at all levels of the tide. The docks have more than 9,000
- immiscibility (chemistry)
mineral deposit: Immiscible melts: …of magmatic segregation involves liquid immiscibility. A cooling magma will sometimes precipitate droplets of a second magma that has an entirely different composition. Like oil and water, the two magmas will not mix (i.e., they are immiscible). The chemical principle governing precipitation of an immiscible liquid is the same as…
- Immoralist, The (work by Gide)
The Immoralist, novella by André Gide, published as L’Immoraliste in 1902, one of the tales Gide called récits. Inspired by Nietszchean philosophy, Gide undertook the work as an examination of the point at which concern for the self must be superseded by moral principles based on empathy for
- Immortal Bartfuss, The (novel by Appelfeld)
Aharon Appelfeld: …Life), Bartfus ben ha-almavet (1988; The Immortal Bartfuss), Katerinah (1989; Katerina), Mesilat barzel (1991; “The Railway”), and Unto the Soul (1994). Beyond Despair: Three Lectures and a Conversation with Philip Roth was published in 1994.
- Immortal Beloved (film by Rose [1994])
Gary Oldman: …of Ludwig van Beethoven in Immortal Beloved (1994).
- Immortal Game, The (chess)
Adolf Anderssen: …games was dubbed the “Immortal Game” because chess players thought that its fame would last forever. Anderssen studied mathematics and philosophy and taught mathematics and German at the Friedrichs Gymnasium.
- Immortal Hour, The (opera by Boughton)
Rutland Boughton: …was the tuneful Romantic opera The Immortal Hour (1913), which ran for 216 performances in London. His other operas include The Queen of Cornwall (1924), The Lily Maid (1934), and Galahad (1944). With Reginald Buckley, his partner in the Glastonbury scheme, he published a book, The Music Drama of the…
- Immortal Iron Fist, The (comic book)
Iron Fist: …in yet another new comic, The Immortal Iron Fist (2006–09). The series, created by writers Ed Brubaker and Matt Fraction and featuring the distinctively dynamic art of David Aja, revealed that K’un-L’un was just one of the “capital cities of Heaven” and that each was championed by a martial artist…
- Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, The (American television film by Wolfe [2017])
Oprah Winfrey: …in the HBO TV movie The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (2017), portraying the daughter of a woman whose cancerous cells were, unbeknownst to her and her family, used in research that led to numerous scientific advances. Winfrey then appeared as Mrs. Which in the 2018 film adaptation of Madeleine…
- Immortal Swan, The (movie)
Anna Pavlova: …included in a compilation called The Immortal Swan, together with some extracts from her solos filmed one afternoon in Hollywood, in 1924, by the actor Douglas Fairbanks, Sr.
- Immortal Wife (work by Stone)
Irving Stone: …of 19 defeated presidential candidates; Immortal Wife (1944), the story of Jesse Benton Frémont, wife of the explorer John Frémont; President’s Lady (1951), based on the life of Rachel Jackson, wife of the seventh U.S. president; Love Is Eternal (1954), a fictionalized account of the marriage of Mary Todd and…
- immortality (philosophy and religion)
immortality, in philosophy and religion, the indefinite continuation of the mental, spiritual, or physical existence of individual human beings. In many philosophical and religious traditions, immortality is specifically conceived as the continued existence of an immaterial soul or mind beyond the
- Immortals (film by Singh Dhandwar [2011])
Henry Cavill: The Tudors and films of the early 2010s: …playing Greek hero Theseus in Immortals (2011) and the son of a CIA agent (played by Bruce Willis) in The Cold Light of Day (2012).
- Immortals (painting by Kim Hong-do)
Kim Hong-do: …his portrayal of the “Sennin” (“Immortals”), whom he depicts in an unusual heroic style, showing them full-figured and robust.
- immortelle (plant)
everlasting: …especially the true everlastings, or immortelles, species of the genus Helichrysum. Helichrysum—native to North Africa, Crete, and the parts of Asia bordering on the Mediterranean—is cultivated in many parts of Europe. The immortelles have one or more whorls of dry, scalelike or membranous bracts (leaves borne below flowers) that preserve…
- Immortelle, L’ (film by Robbe-Grillet [1963])
Alain Robbe-Grillet: …pictures he directed, among them L’Immortelle (1963; “The Immortal”), Trans-Europ-Express (1966), and L’Homme qui ment (1968; The Man Who Lies). His best-known work in the medium, however, is the screenplay for Alain Resnais’s film L’Année dernière à Marienbad (1961; Last Year at Marienbad). Ultimately, Robbe-Grillet’s work raises questions
- immovable
real and personal property, a basic division of property in English common law, roughly corresponding to the division between immovables and movables in civil law. At common law most interests in land and fixtures (such as permanent buildings) were classified as real-property interests. Leasehold
- immune antibody (biochemistry)
blood group: The importance of antigens and antibodies: Immune antibodies are evoked by exposure to the corresponding red cell antigen. Immunization (i.e., the production of antibodies in response to antigen) against blood group antigens in humans can occur as a result of pregnancy, blood transfusion, or deliberate immunization. The combination of pregnancy and…
- immune deficiency (pathology)
immunodeficiency, defect in immunity that impairs the body’s ability to resist infection. The immune system may fail to function for many reasons. Primary immunodeficiency disorders—many of which are inherited, being caused by a genetic defect—are usually evident early in life. Secondary
- immune globulin (biochemistry)
blood transfusion: Transfusion procedures and blood storage: Exchange
- immune interferon (biochemistry)
immune system: Interferons: beta interferon by fibroblasts, and gamma interferon by natural killer cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes (killer T cells). All interferons inhibit viral replication by interfering with the transcription of viral nucleic acid. Interferons exert additional inhibitory effects by regulating the extent to which lymphocytes and other cells express certain important…
- immune reaction (biology)
allergy: …effects are the result of antibody-antigen responses (i.e., they are the products of B-cell stimulation). These can be divided into three basic types.
- immune response gene (genetics)
Baruj Benacerraf: …development of the concept of immune response (Ir) genes, which control the immune system’s ability to respond to antigens (infectious agents or foreign materials that enter the body). More than 30 Ir genes were subsequently found, and that genetic material was determined to be part of the major histocompatibility complex,…
- immune serum
antiserum, blood serum that contains specific antibodies against an antigen (foreign agent), such as an infective organism or poisonous substance. Antibodies in antiserum work by detecting and subsequently neutralizing antigens. Antiserums are produced in animals, most commonly horses, sheep, oxen,
- immune serum globulin (biology)
therapeutics: Immunoglobulins: Immune serum globulin (ISG), obtained from the plasma of a pool of healthy donors, contains a mixture of immunoglobulins, mainly IgG, with lesser amounts of IgM and IgA. It is used to provide passive immunity to a variety of diseases such as measles, hepatitis A,…
- immune surveillance hypothesis (biology)
cancer: Immune surveillance: …small tumours is known as immune surveillance.
- immune system (physiology)
immune system, the complex group of defense responses found in humans and other advanced vertebrates that helps repel disease-causing organisms (pathogens). Immunity from disease is actually conferred by two cooperative defense systems, called nonspecific, innate immunity and specific, acquired
- immune system disorder
immune system disorder, any of various failures in the body’s defense mechanisms against infectious organisms. Disorders of immunity include immune deficiency diseases, such as AIDS, that arise because of a diminution of some aspect of the immune response. Other types of immune disorders, such as
- immune-complex reaction (medicine)
immune system disorder: Type III hypersensitivity: Type III, or immune-complex, reactions are characterized by tissue damage caused by the activation of complement in response to antigen-antibody (immune) complexes that are deposited in tissues. The classes of antibody involved are the same ones that participate in type II reactions—IgG…
- immunity (biology)
immune system: Immunity from disease is actually conferred by two cooperative defense systems, called nonspecific, innate immunity and specific, acquired immunity. Nonspecific protective mechanisms repel all microorganisms equally, while the specific immune responses are tailored to particular types of invaders. Both systems work together to thwart organisms…
- immunity (law)
immunity, in law, exemption or freedom from liability. In England and the United States legislators are immune from civil liability for statements made during legislative debate. They are also immune from criminal arrest, although they are subject to legal action for crime. French law and practice
- immunization (medicine)
immunization, process by which resistance to disease is acquired or induced in plants and animals. This discussion focuses on immunization against infectious diseases in vertebrate animals, specifically humans. Immunization may occur naturally, as when a person is exposed unintentionally to a
- immunochemistry (biochemistry)
biochemistry: Blood: …their interrelationship is known as immunochemistry.
- immunocompetence (biology)
blood: Lymphocytes: …to foreign substances is called immunologic competence (immunocompetence). Immunologic competence, which begins to develop during embryonic life, is incomplete at the time of birth but is fully established soon after birth. If an antigen is introduced into a person’s body before immunologic competence has been established, an immune response will…
- immunocytochemistry (biochemistry)
biochemistry: Blood: …their interrelationship is known as immunochemistry.
- immunodeficiency (pathology)
immunodeficiency, defect in immunity that impairs the body’s ability to resist infection. The immune system may fail to function for many reasons. Primary immunodeficiency disorders—many of which are inherited, being caused by a genetic defect—are usually evident early in life. Secondary
- immunogen (biology)
antigen: …the antigen directly—is called an immunogen.
- immunogenetics (genetics)
human genetics: Immunogenetics: Immunity is the ability of an individual to recognize the “self” molecules that make up one’s own body and to distinguish them from such “nonself” molecules as those found in infectious microorganisms and toxins. This process has a prominent genetic component. Knowledge of the…
- immunoglobulin (biochemistry)
antibody, a protective protein produced by the immune system in response to the presence of a foreign substance, called an antigen. Antibodies recognize and latch onto antigens in order to remove them from the body. A wide range of substances are regarded by the body as antigens, including
- immunoglobulin A deficiency (pathology)
blood transfusion: Transfusion-induced immune reactions: These patients, described as IgA-deficient because they do not make IgA, can have a severe allergic reaction characterized by anaphylaxis with vascular collapse, severe drop in blood pressure, and respiratory distress. This problem can be treated by using washed red cells to remove the remaining plasma containing IgA or…
- immunoglobulin E (biochemistry)
antibody: Antibody structure and classes: IgA, IgD, and IgE. The classes of antibody differ not only in their constant region but also in activity. For example, IgG, the most common antibody, is present mostly in the blood and tissue fluids, while IgA is found in the mucous membranes lining the respiratory and gastrointestinal…
- immunohistochemistry (medicine)
mesothelioma: Diagnosis and subtypes of mesothelioma: …requires that a battery of immunohistochemistry (IHC) tests be performed on each tumour to determine whether it is mesothelioma or perhaps another type of tumour that has spread to the thoracic or abdominal cavity. IHC uses colorimetric antibodies directed at proteins on the surfaces of cells. A pattern of both…
- immunologic blood test (medicine)
immunologic blood test, any of a group of diagnostic analyses of blood that employ antigens (foreign proteins) and antibodies (immunoglobulins) to detect abnormalities of the immune system. Immunity to disease depends on the body’s ability to produce antibodies when challenged by antigens.
- immunologic competence (biology)
blood: Lymphocytes: …to foreign substances is called immunologic competence (immunocompetence). Immunologic competence, which begins to develop during embryonic life, is incomplete at the time of birth but is fully established soon after birth. If an antigen is introduced into a person’s body before immunologic competence has been established, an immune response will…
- immunologic ignorance (biology)
human disease: Autoimmune disorders: …state is referred to as immunologic ignorance. Autoimmune diseases arise when this mechanism fails and self-reactive lymphocytes are activated by self-antigens in the host’s own tissues, often with devastating effects. Systemic lupus erythematosus, thyroiditis, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and rheumatoid arthritis are examples of this type of disorder.
- immunological memory (biology)
lymphocyte: Types and functions of lymphocytes: These cells account for immunologic “memory,” a more rapid, vigorous response to a second encounter with the same antigen.
- immunological response (biology)
allergy: …effects are the result of antibody-antigen responses (i.e., they are the products of B-cell stimulation). These can be divided into three basic types.
- immunological system (physiology)
immune system, the complex group of defense responses found in humans and other advanced vertebrates that helps repel disease-causing organisms (pathogens). Immunity from disease is actually conferred by two cooperative defense systems, called nonspecific, innate immunity and specific, acquired