What is Immunity

Immunity is your biological defense system—a complex network of cells, tissues, and organs that work together to identify and neutralize foreign invaders while keeping your own healthy cells intact.

Type

There aree two main type, Innate and Adaptive immunity.

1. Innate Immunity 

This is also called as non-specific immunity. It is the basic immunity you have born with. 

  • Physical Barriers: Your skin, mucus, and stomach acid

  • Rapid Response: If a germ breaches skin (like through a cut), cells like neutrophils and macrophages rush to site to clear up invaders.

  • Inflammation: Redness and swelling are signs that your body is sending more blood and white blood cells to infection.

2. Adaptive Immunity 

If a pathogen survives first line of defense, adaptive immune system kicks in. It is specific and has a memory.

  • B Cells: These produce antibodies, which act to lock onto a specific virus or bacteria.
  • T Cells: Some T cells act as (Helper T cells), while others are (Cytotoxic T cells) that destroy virus or bacteria.

Types of Adaptive Immunity

Type How it Works Example
Natural Active You get sick and your body learns to fight it. Recovering from a cold.
Artificial Active You are exposed to a harmless version of the germ. Receiving a vaccine.
Natural Passive Antibodies are passed from one person to another. Antibodies passed from mother to baby.
Artificial Passive Receiving pre-made antibodies. Emergency anti-venom shot for a snake bite.

Once your B and T cells defeat a specific pathogen, they create Memory Cells.

If that same germ infect you again months or years later, these memory cells recognize it instantly and launch attack before you even feel symptoms. This is scientific principle behind how vaccines work.

While you can’t boost your immune system beyond its natural peak (and you wouldn’t want to—an overactive immune system causes allergies and autoimmune diseases), you can certainly support it:

  • Sleep: This is when your immune system recharges and produces key proteins.

  • Nutrition: Vitamins C, D, and Zinc are raw materials your cells need to function.

  • Stress Management: High cortisol (the stress hormone) can actually suppress immune cell activity.

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *