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The Immune System Your Magic DoctorThe Immune System Your Magic Doctor : A Guide to the Immune System for the Curious of All Ages by Helen Garvy, Dan Bessie (Illustrator)

Your Immune System

A guide to the immune system for the curious of all ages. Illustrated with cartoon characters, the book demystifies the workings of the various parts of the immune system. It explains how the immune system keeps you healthy and how it helps heal you when you get sick. Includes information on allergies, AIDS, and vaccines.

"This is an informative, clear presentation that is easy to recommend. Enjoyable and entertaining, it presents basic facts about the immune system and how it works. In well-organized sections, the reader is taken step by step through an immune response. The players are depicted in humorous cartoon form." -- Science Books & Films

On Science Books & Films list of Best Children's Science Books (1992).

(From the introduction) Your body is truly amazing and has its very own build-in 'magic doctor' -- the immune system -- that helps keep you well and helps heal you when you get sick. This book will introduce you to the immune system and help you understand such things as fever, pus, vaccines, allergies, colds, auto-immune diseases, cancer, and AIDS -- and, most importantly, how to stay healthy. -- Excerpted from The Immune System Your Magic Doctor : A Guide to the Immune System for the Curious of All Ages by Helen Garvy and Dan Bessie. Copyright © 1992. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved

About the Author
Helen Garvy (Harvard '64) is a writer, filmmaker, and teacher who became fascinated with the immune system. This book is based on an award-winning film of the same title.

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Understanding the Immune System

This information is a collaboration of the National Cancer Institute
and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service

  
How Your Immune System Works

by Marshall Brain

Excerpt:

Inside your body there is an amazing protection mechanism called the immune system. It is designed to defend you against millions of bacteria, microbes, viruses, toxins and parasites that would love to invade your body. To understand the power of the immune system, all that you have have to do is look at what happens to anything once it dies. That sounds gross, but it does show you something very important about your immune system. When something dies its immune system (along with everything else) shuts down. In a matter of hours the body is invaded by all sorts of bacteria, microbes, parasites... None of these things are able to get in when your immune system is working, but the moment your immune system stops the door is wide open. Once you die it only takes a few weeks for these organisms to completely dismantle your body and carry it away, until all that's left is a skeleton. Obviously your immune system is doing something amazing to keep all of that dismantling from happening when you are alive!

   

The Immune System and Disease Resistance

By W. Jean Dodds, DVM

Excerpt:

This article discusses the essential role of the immune system in maintaining the body's overall general health and resistance to disease. The focus will be on environmental factors or events which may cause or trigger immune dysfunction leading to either immune deficiency or immune stimulation (reactive or autoimmunity). Related to these events is the development of cancer which is a disruption of cell growth control...

  

The Anatomy of the Immune System

By Dr K. West

The immune system operates throughout the body. There are, however, certain sites where the cells of the immune system are organised into specific structures. These are classified as central lymphoid tissue (bone marrow, thymus) and peripheral lymphoid tissue (lymph nodes, spleen, mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue)...

  

The Immune System

From the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Excerpt:

The immune system is a complex of organs--highly specialized cells and even a circulatory system separate from blood vessels--all of which work together to clear infection from the body.

The organs of the immune system, positioned throughout the body, are called lymphoid organs. The word "lymph" in Greek means a pure, clear stream--an appropriate description considering its appearance and purpose...

  

AIDS, HIV and The Immune System

By John C. Brown

Excerpt:

The virus responsible for the condition known as AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome), is named HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus). AIDS is the condition whereby the body's specific defense system against all infectious agents no longer functions properly. There is a focused loss over time of immune cell function which allows intrusion by several different infectious agents, the result of which is loss of the ability of the body to fight infection and the subsequent acquisition of diseases such as pneumonia. We will examine the virus itself, the immune system, the specific effect(s) of HIV on the immune system, the research efforts presently being made to investigate this disease, and finally, how one can try to prevent acquiring HIV...

  

Immune System / AIDS and HIV Topics

This site from the U.S. National Library of Medicine hosts many topics including:

AIDS
Immune System and Disorders
Autoimmune Diseases (General)
Lupus

  

The Human Immune System

Complete study of this system with an introduction, the fluid systems, innate immunity, etc.

From the Introduction:

The human immune system is a truly amazing constellation of responses to attacks from outside the body. It has many facets, a number of which can change to optimize the response to these unwanted intrusions. The system is remarkably effective, most of the time. This note will give you a brief outline of some of the processes involved...

 

The Immune System

From the National Center for Biotechnology Information

Excerpt:

is a complex and highly developed system, yet its mission is simple: to seek and kill invaders. If a person is born with a severely defective immune system, death from infection by a virus, bacterium, fungus or parasite will occur. In severe combined immunodeficiency, lack of an enzyme means that toxic waste builds up inside immune system cells, killing them and thus devastating the immune system...

  

The Immune System:  A Primer

By Henry Dreher, thebody.com

Excerpt from The Immune Power Personality by Henry Dreher:

As a guide to the research detailed in this book, I offer a primer on the basic functions of our immune system--its organs, cells, cell products, and messenger molecules. This system is a fluid network designed to protect us from agents of disease, and to heal wounds delivered by injury or invasion. One immunologist called it a "roving bag of cells" that patrols our bodies on missions of resistance and restoration.

In order to do its job properly, our immune system must be exquisitely sensitive in detecting the surface features of other cells and substances. It must distinguish the "fingerprints" of intruders from those of family members--our own cells and molecules. That is why scientist Ted Melnechuk once remarked that "The immune system is a sensory organ for molecular touch." But our defense network is called upon to be as aggressive as it must be sensitive. Its task is to indentify and then eliminate foreign agents--be they bacteria, viruses, fungi, toxic chemicals, or cancer cells--with precision and dispatch.

Except for the nervous system, the immune system is the most complex biological system we have. It consists of master glands, principally the thymus; various sites that harbor immune cells; and different classes of "soldier" cells, which carry out specialized functions--including cells that prompt, cells that alert, cells that facilitate, cells that activate, cells that surround, cells that kill, even cells that clean up. Many immune cells also synthesize and secrete special molecules that act as messengers, regulators, or helpers in the process of defending against invaders...

  

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