B1: Pathogens, Fighting Disease, Vaccinations and Drugs Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the two main types of pathogens?

A

Bacteria and viruses

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2
Q

How do bacteria make you feel ill?

A

They damage your cells and produce toxins

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3
Q

What are bacteria?

A

They are very small cells which can reproduce rapidly inside the body.

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4
Q

What are viruses?

A

They are not cells and are tiny.

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5
Q

What do viruses do?

A
  1. They replicate themselves by invading the cells and using the cells’ machinery to produce many copies of themselves
  2. The cell will usually burst, releasing all the new viruses
  3. The cell damage causes you to feel ill
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6
Q

In what ways is the body adapted to protecting you from foreign microorganisms?

A
  1. Skin, hairs and mucus in the respiratory tract stops organisms getting inside the body
  2. There are platelets in the blood that clot blood to seal wounds quickly
  3. White blood cells attack microorganisms when they are in the body.
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7
Q

How do white blood cells kill microorganisms?

A
  1. The consume them-they engulf foreign cells and digest them
  2. They produce antibodies
  3. They produce antitoxins
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8
Q

How does a white blood cell kill foreign cells using antibodies?

A
  1. Invading cells have antigens on their surfaces
  2. When a white blood cell comes across the foreign antigen, it will produce proteins (antibodies) to kill the invading cells. The antibodies produced are specific to that type of antigen
  3. Antibodies are then rapidly produced and carried around the body to kill all similar bacteria/viruses
  4. If the person is infected by the same foreign cell again the person will be immune so they won’t get ill when the white blood cell attacks it.
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9
Q

How does a white blood cell kill foreign cells using antitoxins?

A

They produce antitoxins that counter the toxins produced by the invading cell.

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10
Q

How does a vaccination work?

A
  1. They involve injecting a dead or inactive version of the microorganisms
  2. Although the antigens are harmless, the white blood cells produce antibodies to attack them.
  3. Because white blood cells remember how to attack antigens if they have already entered the body before, the person will become immune
  4. If the live microorganism enters the body now, the person will not become ill because the white blood cells will rapidly produce antibodies to kill off the pathogen.
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11
Q

Why are booster injections sometimes needed?

A

Some vaccines wear off over time so booster injections are given to increase levels of antibodies again.

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12
Q

What are the advantages of vaccinations?

A
  1. Vaccines have helped to control lots of infectious diseases
  2. Epidemics can be prevented if a large percentage of the population is vaccinated. Even the people who have not been vaccinated are unlikely to catch the disease because there are fewer people ale to pass it on.
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13
Q

What are the disadvantages of vaccinations?

A
  1. They don’t always work

2. People can react badly to a vaccine but it is rare

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14
Q

What is an epidemic?

A

A big outbreak of a disease.

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15
Q

What is a pandemic?

A

When a disease spread around the world.

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16
Q

What are painkillers?

A

Drugs that relieve pain but they do not actually tackle the cause of disease, just help to reduce symptoms.

17
Q

What are antibiotics?

A

A drug that actually kills or prevents the growth off bacteria, causing the illness, without killing the body’s cells.

18
Q

Why don’t antibiotics kill viruses?

A

Viruses reproduce inside/using the body’s cells, which makes it very difficult to develop drugs that will only destroy the virus and not the body’s cells.

19
Q

How can bacteria become resistant to antibiotics?

A
  1. Bacteria mutates and these mutations can cause them to become resistant to an antibiotic
  2. This means that only the non-resistant strains of bacteria will be destroyed
  3. The resistant bacteria will survive and reproduce so its population will increase
  4. The resistant strain could cause a serious infection that cannot be treated by antibiotics
20
Q

How can the rate of development of resistant strains of bacteria be slowed down?

A

Doctors need to avoid over-prescribing antibiotics