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Infectious Diseases BIOMEDICAL TECHNOLOGY Part One
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Page 1: Infectious Diseases BIOMEDICAL TECHNOLOGY Part One.

Infectious DiseasesBIOMEDICAL TECHNOLOGY

Part One

Page 2: Infectious Diseases BIOMEDICAL TECHNOLOGY Part One.
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OVERVIEW

* An Infectious Disease is a disease that is caused by the invasion of a host by agents whose activities harm the host’s tissues.

* They cause disease (by impairing normal tissue function) and can be transmitted to other individuals (they are infectious)

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Vocabulary

• Pathogens – Microorganisms that are capable of causing disease.

• Infection – Results when a pathogen invades and begin growing within a host.

• Disease – results only if and when tissue function is impaired (i.e. burns, skin lesions)

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Infectious Process

• The body has defense mechanisms to prevent infection and to prevent disease after infection occurs.

• In order to cause disease, pathogens must be able to enter the host body, adhere to specific host cells, invade and colonize host tissues, and inflict damage on those tissues.

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Infectious Process Cont.

• Entrances to the host: mouth, eyes, genital openings, or wounds.

• Growth of pathogens or the production of toxins/enzymes cause disease.

• Some normal flora prevent disease.

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Latent Period

• A "latent period" is the lag time between exposure to a disease-causing agent and the onset of the disease the agent causes.

• For instance, the latent period between exposure to HIV infection and the onset of AIDS may be many years.

• Example: Magic Johnson

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MICROBES THAT CAUSE INFECTIOUS DISEASES

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BACTERIA

• Small unicellular microorganism that multiplies by cell division.

• Found as bacillus (rod shaped), coccus (spherical), or spirillum (spiral)

• Anthrax, Cholera, Legionellosis, Lyme Disease, Salmonellas, Strep, TB, Typhoid, Yersinia pestis (plague)

• Treatable with antibiotics

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Bacteria Cont.

• Staphylococcus aureus (Staph)– Favorite hangout: skin and nose– Likes: getting inside the body where it can cause a minor

infection like a boil, or serious, sometimes fatal infections such as blood infections or pneumonia.

– Dislikes: many antibiotics

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Bacteria Cont.

• AEROBES• Reproduces only in the

presence of oxygen

• ANAEROBES• Reproduce only in the

absence of oxygen

Facultative anaerobic bacteria:can produce in either environment

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BACTERIA EXAMPLES:

Gram positive– STAPHYLOCOCCUS

Gram negative– SALMONELLA

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Staph infections

• Flesh eating early • Impetigo

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• Flesh Eating bacteria ADVANCED

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Yersinia Pestis (looks like Pests)

• Bacterium that causes Plague

• Transmitted via rodents typically

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VIRUSES

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Viruses

• Apart from the host cell, have no metabolism and cannot reproduce or survive unless they take over a living cell

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Retroviruses – a classification of viruses

• HIV• Certain types of

CA• Retroviruses are

viruses whose genome consists of RNA not DNA.

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Think about IT• In February 1997 it wasreported that pig cellscontain a retroviruscapable of infectinghuman cells. This istroublesome because ofthe efforts that are beingmade to transplant pigtissue into humans (e.g.,fetal pig cells into thebrains of patients withParkinson's disease/hearts etc).

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Virus Examples• Chicken pox• Cold sores• Genital herpes• Shingles• Small pox• AIDS• Influenza• Rabies-direct contact• West Nile Virus• Ebola →• Hantavirus

• Many viruses are preventable via vaccinations• Can be treated with Antiviral drugs• ANTIBIOTICS do not work

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Smallpox virus

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Rotaviruses

• Gastroenteritis• Wheel shaped virus

causing diarrhea

• Every year it kills approximately 1 Million children world wide

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FUNGI

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Fungi

• Have a cell wall and a cell membrane

• Includes molds and yeast

• Treat with antifungal medication, sometimes with antibiotics.

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Fungi examples

• Ringworm• Histoplasmosis• Athletes foot• Thrush

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• Yeast or candida are opportunists

• Yeast infections are the most common opportunistic infection

• Antibiotics reduce normal flora and allow yeast to grow making the pt susceptible to an opportunistic infection

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PROTOZOA

• Acquired through contaminated food or water, or bite of an arthropod (mosquito)

• More common in wet climates like the tropics• Amoebic dysentery• Malaria- re-emerging d/t drug resistance and

fear of vaccination• Treatable with antibiotics

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HELMINTHS (WORMS) ewwww!

• Simple, invertibrate animals, some infectious parasites

• In intestine, blood, body tissue• Medications to force evacuation or death of

worms

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• Swimmer’s itch in US– Schistosoma (flatworm)– Symptoms include

abdominal pain and diarrhea

• Trichinella spiralis (roundworm)– Ingested in undercooked

pork from infected pigs.– Symptoms include

vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain

SEE NEXT SLIDE FOR PICTURE!!!

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FilariasisFilariasis- worm infestation in lymphatic system that prevents normal draining of lymphatic fluids. Causes SEVERE swelling.

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PRIONS (pree-ons)

• Extremely smallparticles that consistonly of protein.• Resistant to heat andDisinfectants• No known treatments– Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease– “mad cow disease” in cattle