Approach to Infectious Disease Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards
6/18/19
How has sickle cell become an evolution to protect against malaria (plasmodium falciparum)?
The altered shape gives a natural resistance from Malaria’s function of manipulating and reshapes proteins on the surface of cells to stick to capillaries of brain and organs
Pathogen
ANY microorganism capable of causing disease
Disease
Upset in homeostasis of the host, reulting in generation of observable changes
Normal flora functions
- Prevent colonization by pathogens for competing for attachment
- Excrete vitamins in excess of their own needs for absorption by the host
- kill pathogen pathogens through released factors
Opportunistic infeection
Microorganisms that may or may not cause disease generally colonize but do not infect the host unless they are introduced to an area they are not normally found or in an immunocompromised host
Community acquired infection
Infeciton acquired outside of a healthcare setting, usually more antibiotic sensitive
Nosocomial infection
Hospital acquired infection, often resistant to antibiotics
Virulence
Measure of pathogenicity, ability to cause disease
Endemic
Disease maintained in population with predictable regularity
Epidemic
Disease cases exceed expected number in given period of time
7 criteria to be pathogenic
1) able to enter host
2) abe to adhere to host
3) able to acquire nutrients
4) able to circumvent immune system
5) able to replicate
6) able to disseminate throughout host
7) transmissible to new host
PMH for ID
- Ask about current medications such as corticosteroids, TNF inhibitors, immunosuppressants
- chronic disease (think diabetes)
- Origin of birth (vaccines they need)
Standard precautions
Set of precautions to take in every medical encounter to avoid the spread of blood borne pathogens by assuming all are infected with HIV
Annual seasonal flu vaccines may provide…
…some level of protection against novel flu viruses
Vector
Agent who carries pathogen from one organism to another