4.1 - Communicable Diseases Flashcards
What is a pathogen?
An organism that causes disease.
What are the four types of pathogens?
Bacteria, viruses, fungi and protoctista.
What is a communicable disease?
A disease that can spread between organisms.
Name the 2 animal and 1 plant diseases caused by bacteria.
Tuberculosis, bacterial meningitis and ring rot.
Name the 2 animal and 1 plant diseases caused by a virus.
HIV, influenza and Tobacco mosaic virus.
Name the 2 animal and 1 plant diseases caused by fungi.
Athletes foot, ringworm and Black sigatoka.
Name an animal and a plant disease caused by protoctista.
Malaria and late blight.
What is the difference between direct and indirect transmission?
Indirect transmission requires an intermediate to transmit one disease from one organism to another. Direct transmission does not.
Give two examples of direct transmission and indirect transmission.
Direct – droplet infection (coughing or sneezing tiny droplets of mucus or saliva directly onto someone), sexual intercourse.
Indirect - intermediates include air, water, food or another organism (known as a vector).
Suggest how living conditions, climate and social factors affect disease transmission.
Living conditions – overcrowding and poor ventilation will increase transmission rates.
Climate – wet summers increase transmission of diseases that need water to spread.
Social factors - poverty will reduce access to drugs for treatment. Poverty will also reduce access to healthcare means you will be less likely to be diagnosed. Both are factors that will increase transmission.
Describe the non-specific defence mechanism.
Does not distinguish between one type of pathogen and another.
Responds to all in the same way.
Acts immediately.
Two forms: a barrier to the entry of pathogens or phagocytosis.
Describe and explain each of the following non-specific defence mechanisms: skin, mucus membranes, blood clotting, inflammation, wound repair and expulsive reflexes.
Skin – physical barrier, blocking pathogens from entering; chemical barrier, producing antimicrobial chemicals and lowering pH to inhibit the growth of pathogens.
Mucus membranes – protect body openings exposed to the environment. Cells produce mucus, mucus traps pathogens, ciliated cells move the mucus.
Blood clotting – a blood clot is a mesh of (insoluble) fibrin fibres. Plug wounds to prevent entry and blood loss; formed by a series of chemical reactions that take place when platelets are exposed to damaged vessels.
Inflammation – swelling, pain, heat and redness. Triggered by tissue damage. Chemical signals (histamine) released which increase the permability of blood vessels, making them leak fluid to the surrounding area. The resulting swelling isolates any pathogens that may have entered damaged tissue. Signals also cause vasodilation, increasing the blood flow to the damaged area – making area hot and brings WBC to the area to fight off any pathogens.
Wound repair – the outer layer of skin cells divide and migrate to the edges of the wound. The tissue below the wound then contracts to bring the edges closer together. Collagen fibres aid the repair process – too many result in a scar.
Expulsive reflexes – expel foreign objects (including pathogens) from the body. Sneezing and coughing – irritation in the nasal passage or the respiratory tract.
Describe the process by which a pathogen is destroyed after it has become attached to the surface of a phagocyte.
Pathogen is recognized as foreign.
Pathogen is engulfed by the phagocyte.
Forms a phagosome.
Lysosome fuses with phagocyte and releases enzymes and lysins.
These enzymes break down the pathogen by hydrolysis.
Macrophages present antigen on surface and present to specific immune system – called antigen presenting cells (APC).
Why is the response involving phagocytes regarded as non-specific?
Phagocytes are able to break down many different pathogens.
Name 3 white blood cells (WBC) that are phagocytic.
Neutrophils, Monocytes and Macrophages.
Explain how neutrophils are able to pass from the blood into the tissue fluid.
Neutrophils have a lobed nucleus so can squeeze through the walls of capillaries into the tissue fluid.