Hi, I'm new here. I have a question and only basic background in science, so forgive me if this seems rather elementary, but I have not been able to find the answer through other means, so here I am... Hope I am not making a repeat thread - if this is the case I would appreciate someone sending me the link to the previous discussion. So this is my question -
Is there a difference in the human body's immune response when encountering an antigen that is injected intramuscularly versus an antigen that it encounters through normal means, as through the mucus membranes? If yes, what is the difference? How does this effect short and long term immunity to that particular antigen? Most obviously, this might be an antigen that one would encounter through vaccination rather than from human to human contact - but most vaccines are not live viruses, so is that an effect on long term immunity as well?
Any answer is greatly appreciated! Thank you!
Katie
Merged post follows:
Consecutive posts mergedAlso - I was told that the difference was that T1 cells are what initially encounters the pathogen when it enters the body in the usual way, whereas T2 cells are what initially encounter the pathogen when it is injected into the body, bypassing the body's other defenses, and that this is what effects long term immunity - for instance if you were to contract varicella virus from human to human contact T1 cells would encounter it first and after you are well you generally have life long immunity, but if you receive the varicella vaccine that T2 cells are what encounters the virus and your immunity is not as long term. Is this plausible, or is it more likely caused by the difference between the form of the virus that enters the body - live full strength virus vs. live attenuated virus?