Types

How Much Do You Know About Autoimmune Diseases?

Autoimmune diseases can affect anyone, but women are at greater risk. These diseases also share common symptoms: severe tiredness (fatigue), dizziness, and low-grade fever. Test your knowledge of this serious—and mysterious—class of diseases.

1. Which of these is an autoimmune disease?





2. If you have an autoimmune disease, what happens with the immune system?




3. Autoimmune diseases strike which group more often?




4. What tissues, organs, or body systems can be affected by autoimmune diseases?




5. Lupus is more common among women in which ethnic group?




6. How does a person develop an autoimmune disease?





7. Why are some autoimmune diseases difficult to diagnose?




8. Which of these autoimmune diseases can be cured?




Featured in

Author: Sinovic, Dianna

© 2000-2026 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.

Get Connected to a Care Manager

Get Connected
Related Articles
Read article
Immune Conditions
Immunoglobulin A Deficiency

Immunoglobulin A (IgA) is a blood protein that's part of your immune system. Your body makes IgA to help fight off sickness. Having an IgA deficiency means that you have low levels or no immunoglobulin A in your bloodstream.

Read article
Immune Conditions
Sjögren Syndrome

Sjögren Syndrome is an autoimmune disorder. This means that the body's own immune system attacks its own cells and tissues by mistake. In this case, it attacks the glands that make moisture. It commonly causes dry skin, dry eyes, and dry mouth.

Read article
Immune Conditions
Takayasu Arteritis

Takayasu's arteritis is an autoimmune disease. It causes inflammation of the large arteries. It's a rare disease that's most common in women and people of Asian descent.

Read article
Immune Conditions
Myasthenia Gravis

Myasthenia gravis is a chronic autoimmune disorder in which antibodies destroy neuromuscular connections. This causes problems with communication between nerves and muscle, resulting in weakness of the skeletal muscles. Myasthenia gravis affects the voluntary muscles of the body, especially the eyes, mouth, throat, and limbs.