B6.3 - Part 2 Non-communicable diseases Flashcards

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1
Q

Name five non-communicable diseases

A
  • Coronary Heart disease
  • Bonchitis
  • Diabetes mellitis type 1 & 2
  • Cancer
  • Liver cirrhosis
  • Alzheimer’s Disease
  • Epilepsy
  • Osteoarthritis
  • Osteoporosis
  • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
  • Cerebrovascular Disease (Stroke)
  • Coronary Artery Disease.
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2
Q

Name the four commonly identified harmful substances in tobacco smoke.

A
  • Tar - Sticks cillia together preventing them wafting mucus away from the lungs causing smokers cough. Collects in the lungs. Carginogenic
  • Nicotine - Addictive drug. Makes your heart beat faster, narrows blood vessels leading to increase blood pressure & stoke.
  • Carbon monoxide - Attaches to the haemoglobin in RBCs stopping oxygen from binding making the heart work harder leanig to CHD.
  • Particulates - small peices of solid. These are engulfed by WBCs relesing an enzyme that weakens the walls of alveoli preventing proper inflation - emphysema.
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3
Q

What treatments are available for cardiovascular disease?

A
  • Angioplasty - A stent can be surgically implanted to keep arteries open
  • Statins can be taken to lower cholesterol levels
  • Pacemakers can be inserted to maintain heart rhythm
  • Heart transplant or artificial valves can be inserted
  • Betablockers can be taken to lower blood pressure
  • Nitrates can be taken to widen blood vessels allowing more blood to flow through at a lower pressure
  • Antiplatelets to reduce stickiness of bllod platelets and therefore clotting
  • Bypass surgery using vessels from other areas of the body.
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4
Q

What lifestyle changes should a person with cardiovascular disease make?

A
  • Healthy balanced diet - reducing processed foods
  • Exercise more
  • Drink less alcohol
  • Stop smoking
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5
Q

What is cancer?

A

A disease where cells in the body begin to divide uncontrollably.

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6
Q

How are embryonic stem cells used to treat medical conditions?

A
  • Testing new drugs for safety and effectiveness
  • Growth of tissues/organs with no concern of rejection
  • Reversing damaged caused by disease by:
    • Manufacturing brain cells - Parkinson’s
    • Rebuilding bones and cartillage - arthritis
    • Making replacement heart valves
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7
Q

Describe how the risk of rejection is minimised in trnasplantation.

A
  • Tissue matching
  • Immunosuppresant drugs
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8
Q

Name two risks associated with the use of stem cells in medicine.

A
  • Long-term side effects unknown
  • Rejection of foreign materials
  • Potential increased risk of cancer
  • Ethical issues surrounding use of embryonic stem cells
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9
Q

What is gene therapy?

A

The placement of a fully functioning allele into a cell containing a faulty allele for the same gene.

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10
Q

Give one benefit and one risk of gene therapy.

A
  • Benefits - Replacement of faulty genes, reversal of chronic disease, lasting results, improvement in life quality
  • Risks - Virus used to deliver could cause harm, increased risk of cancer, inflammatory response, sepsis, infection, targeting wrong cells
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11
Q

What is personalised medicine?

A

Preventing and treating diseases tailored specifically to the patient’s genome.

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