A new study suggests that alternating arms for vaccine doses may produce a more powerful immune response. Researchers at UW found that as T cells maintain, lose, or regain their memory potential, this flexibility allows memory T cell numbers to launch robust immune responses. Separate studies at Sinai Immunology and McMaster University identified a novel, rare population of memory B cells in allergic people, which lead to allergic reactions. Working with the cells of people with peanut allergies, researchers identified a 'memory population' of immune cells that lead to allergic reactions. Researchers at McMaster University and the Danish pharmaceutical company ALK-Abello have discovered a new type of memory B cell with unique features and a unique genetic signature that could be a target for new immunotherapies for allergies.
Researchers at McMAster University and the Danish pharmaceutical company ALK-Abello have discovered a new type of memory B cell with unique features and a unique genetic signature that could be a target for new immunotherapies for allergies. Read more: https://t.co/oJpTKjzaIB https://t.co/8FABmTKx8t
Alternating vaccine doses in your arms could provide best protection, researchers say @mallikamarshall reports https://t.co/uVwpSEfBZg
Researchers discover new cell that remembers allergies @mcmastereng @sciencetm https://t.co/Blf2QYdfYs
Working with the cells of people with peanut allergies, researchers identify a "memory population" of immune cells that lead to allergic reactions. https://t.co/DSpkhLNIMa
How do immune cells remember what the body's allergic to? Separate studies out of @SinaiImmunol and @McMasterU point to a novel, rare population of memory B cells in allergic people. NEW: https://t.co/gnhhRbJuyj
If you’ve presented the same arm for every dose of a particular vaccine, you may want to reconsider. Alternating arms may produce a more powerful immune response, a new study suggests. https://t.co/MYgEhnDoAo
One arm or two? How you get vaccinated may make a difference. https://t.co/NNqjUi3mJD
Researchers at @UW have investigated when and how CD8+ #Tcells make memory decisions. They found that as T cells maintain, lose, or regain their memory potential, this flexibility allows memory T cell numbers to launch robust immune responses. Abstract: https://t.co/YFlDeVQq7k https://t.co/R5xnXBMMAC
Vaccine Life Hack: Use Both Arms https://t.co/rABuJDRTrA https://t.co/Q79pKTZ25C
Alternating arms may produce a more powerful immune response, a new study suggests. (via @nytimes) https://t.co/zuXImwwhj5