AbstractInfants are born with immature immune systems, making it difficult for them to effectively respond to the infectious pathogens encountered shortly after birth. Maternal antibody is actively transported across the placenta and serves to provide protection to the newborn during the first weeks to months of life. However, maternal antibody has been shown repeatedly to inhibit the immune responses of young children to vaccines. The mechanisms for this inhibition are presented and the impact on ultimate immune responses is discussed
Maternal antibody is the major form of protection from disease in early life when the neonatal immun...
Vaccines that successfully prevent severe infant respiratory virus diseases should induce protection...
One of the major challenges in vaccinology is the development of products that are able to induce pr...
AbstractInfants are born with immature immune systems, making it difficult for them to effectively r...
During the last few decades, maternal immunization as a strategy to protect young infants from infec...
With birth, the newborn is transferred from a quasi-sterile environment to the outside world. At thi...
Several mechanisms have been suggested as mediating the inhibitory influence of maternal antibodies ...
Vaccination in pregnancy is an effective means of protecting infants from infections until the perio...
Abstract Background Various studies have shown that infants under the age of 6 months are especially...
Immunisation during pregnancy to protect infants against tetanus, pertussis and influenza is recomm...
AbstractMaternal antibody prevents the use of live, attenuated measles vaccine (LAV) before 6–9 mont...
The known protective effects of passively acquired maternal antibody on the resistance of newborns t...
Immunization during pregnancy is an efficient strategy to protect both the mother and the newborn in...
There remains a general misconception that the immune status of the fetus and neonate is immature or...
The immune system of young infants is both quantitatively and qualitatively distinct from that of ad...
Maternal antibody is the major form of protection from disease in early life when the neonatal immun...
Vaccines that successfully prevent severe infant respiratory virus diseases should induce protection...
One of the major challenges in vaccinology is the development of products that are able to induce pr...
AbstractInfants are born with immature immune systems, making it difficult for them to effectively r...
During the last few decades, maternal immunization as a strategy to protect young infants from infec...
With birth, the newborn is transferred from a quasi-sterile environment to the outside world. At thi...
Several mechanisms have been suggested as mediating the inhibitory influence of maternal antibodies ...
Vaccination in pregnancy is an effective means of protecting infants from infections until the perio...
Abstract Background Various studies have shown that infants under the age of 6 months are especially...
Immunisation during pregnancy to protect infants against tetanus, pertussis and influenza is recomm...
AbstractMaternal antibody prevents the use of live, attenuated measles vaccine (LAV) before 6–9 mont...
The known protective effects of passively acquired maternal antibody on the resistance of newborns t...
Immunization during pregnancy is an efficient strategy to protect both the mother and the newborn in...
There remains a general misconception that the immune status of the fetus and neonate is immature or...
The immune system of young infants is both quantitatively and qualitatively distinct from that of ad...
Maternal antibody is the major form of protection from disease in early life when the neonatal immun...
Vaccines that successfully prevent severe infant respiratory virus diseases should induce protection...
One of the major challenges in vaccinology is the development of products that are able to induce pr...