Differences between Active Immunity and Passive Immunity
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The major differences are:
S.N. | Characteristics | Active Immunity | Passive Immunity |
1. | Definition | The protective immunity in which the individual’s own immune system is stimulated to produce antibodies and lymphocytes. | The immunity in which a person receives antibodies or lymphocytes that have been produced by another individual’s immune system. |
2. | Exposure to Antigen | Requires exposure to a pathogen or to the antigen of a pathogen. | Does not require exposure to an infectious agent or its antigen. |
3. | Immune system involvement | The immune system of the individual is actively involved in the process. | The immune system of the individual is not actively involved but rather passive. |
4. | Natural acquirement | Arise naturally when an individual is exposed to an antigen or pathogen (clinical infection). | Arise naturally when a fetus receives antibodies from the mother across the placenta or when a breast-feeding infant ingests antibodies in the mother’s milk. |
5. | Artificial acquirement | Conferred artificially by means of vaccines. | Conferred artificially by administration of preformed antibodies. |
6. | Immunity type | Involves both humoral and cell mediated immunity. | The immunity is conferred only by readymade antibodies. |
7. | Components | T cells (cytotoxic T cells, helper T cells, memory T cells, and suppressor T cells), B cells (memory B cells and plasma cells), and antigen-presenting cells (B cells, dendritic cells, and macrophages). | No immune cells are involved as antibody is preformed. |
8. | Antibody production | Involves antibody production which is induced by infection or immunogen. | No antibody is produced, but directly transferred. |
9. | Memory cell formation | Active immunity results in the formation of long-lasting memory cells. | Memory immune cells are not formed. |
10. | Secondary response | The first exposure leads to primary response and incase of a subsequent exposure to same pathogen later, a much faster and stronger secondary response is established. | Absence of a secondary response. |
11. | Durability | The protection offered is long-lived. | The protection is only transient. |
12. | Response time | The protective response takes time to establish as a lag period is present. | No lag period hence the protection is instant. |
13. | Reactivation | Reactivated by recurrence of infection or by revaccination. | Frequent re-administration needed for renewed protection. |
14. | Booster effect | Subsequent doses with antigens cause booster effect. | Subsequent doses are less effective due to immune elimination. |
15. | Suitability | Active immunity is not suitable for protection of immuno-compromised or immuno-deficient individuals. | Passive immunity is useful in cases of immuno-compromised, immuno-deficient or severe combined immunodeficiency. |
16. | Use | Very effective for prophylaxis of diseases. | Artificial passive immunity is effective as a post-exposure remedy. |
17. | Effectiveness of Protection | Provides effective protection. | Protection rendered is less effective and may not be complete. |
18. | Adverse effect | It can be implicated in autoimmune diseases and allergies, but generally does not have side effects. | A condition called serum sickness can result from exposure to antisera. |
19. | Examples | Natural – Producing antibodies in response to exposure to a pathogenic infection such as measles or cold. Artificial – Producing antibodies in response to the controlled exposure to an attenuated pathogen (i.e. vaccination). | Natural – Receiving antibodies from another organism (e.g. to the foetus via the colostrum or a newborn via breast milk). Artificial – Receiving manufactured antibodies via external delivery (e.g blood transfusions of monoclonal antibodies). |
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