Peter Attia· MD
and then on the other side is waiting for them a whole panoply of immune cells ready to attack and so if a virus gets in through the body now typically it doesn't we try to fight it right away but sometimes it does and so let's say a virus or a bacteria or a fungi gets into the body gets through our typical first layer like a Skin Barrier and it gets through then right away we have these cells called macroasia and they literally just eat up things so they bind on to the virus or the bacteria or the fungi eat it up and then eat it up into small little bits and then they expose those small little bits on their surface and then with those small little bits on the surface they actually then become the educator pieces for another group of cells called the t- cell and that's what we call the cellular C system macroasia antigen presenting cells these little bits are called antigens and then the te- cell comes along and says huh that's interesting I'm going to teach myself the te- cell I'm going to teach myself how to operate Within These Little antigens what are these things how do I train the immune system to get rid of this thing so then the te- cell says all right I'm going to start to understand what this new organism is that just attacked my body and I want to defend against that I don't want that bacteria or that fungi or that virus in this body so the te- cell becomes what we call a memory cell a memory t- cell then teaches another cell called the B cell the t- cell interacts with the B cell the B cell then starts to make imunoglobulin and that B cell makes the imunoglobulin thanks for the teaching cell to train that B cell to make the immunoglobulins for the exact little antigens that that virus made or that bacteria made or that fungi made