Top Banner
Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease
20

Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Dec 20, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Infectious Disease

&

Defense against Disease

Page 2: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.
Page 3: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient.

Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC

Page 4: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.CO insert: A TEM of a section through a red blood cell infected with malarial parasites (Plasmodium sp.)

© Omikron/Photo Researchers, Inc.

Page 5: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.1: Five possible origins of normal microflora in newborn

Page 6: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.2: The course of disease, as typified by measles

Page 7: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.3: Methods of transmitting disease

Page 8: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.4: Tissue invasion

Reprinted with permission from the American Society for Microbiology (ASM News. 1992, Vol. 58: 486) Photo courtesy of Doctor Brett Finlay.

Page 9: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.5: The relationship between host resistance and disease

Page 10: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.6A-E: The mechanism of phagocytosis

Page 11: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.6F-I: The mechanism of phagocytosis

Page 12: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.7: The origin of the immune system

Page 13: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.8: The process of cell-mediated immunity

Page 14: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.9: The process of antibody-mediated immunity

Page 15: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.10A-C: Details of an antibody molecule

Page 16: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.10D-E: Details of an antibody molecule

Page 17: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.11: The five types of antibodies

Page 18: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.12: Five mechanisms by which antibodies interact with antigens

Page 19: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.13: The four types of acquired immunity

Page 20: Infectious Disease & Defense against Disease. Figure 17.CO: The Anopheles gambia mosquito is a malaria vector in the Orient. Courtesy of James Gathany/CDC.

Figure 17.14: The process of anaphylaxis and allergy