Definitions Flashcards
Infectious Disease
An illness resulting from an infection that is communicable or transmissible.
Infection
An infection is the invasion of an organism’s body by disease-causing agents, including the way that it multiplies and the way that the host tissues respond to the infectious agents and the toxins they produce.
Infectious agents
Pathogens- anything that can produce disease
Parasitism
The relationship between species where one organism (parasite) lives in or on another organism (host) causing it some harm
Parasite: any organism that decreases the fitness of its host by infecting it
Types of parasites
- Microparasites: viruses and bacteria
- Macroparasites: worms
Ecological examples: tapeworms, mites, parasitoid wasps, reed warbler raising young of another bird, hookworms, ticks, HIV, trypanosoma
What is not an infectious disease?
- Genetic diseases
- Ex. hemophilia - Environmentally-caused diseases
- Ex. scurvy - Cancer- both a genetic and environmental component
Ecology
A branch of biology that studies the interactions among organisms and their environment, both abiotic and biotic.
Ex. Crows and Cherry trees
Disease Ecology
- The study of spatio-temporal distribution of infectious diseases, which includes the interactions of host populations with pathogen populations in the environment over time
- Comes from the study of infectious diseases of wildlife
Epidemiology
-The branch of medicine which deals with the incidence, distribution, and possible control of diseases and other factors relating to health
- Comes from a branch of medicine
- Also includes non-infectious diseases such as smoking, drug use, obesity, mental health
The disease triangle
For disease to occur, need a susceptible host, favourable environment, and a pathogen
Why is it important to know/learn about infectious diseases?
- Reduce productivity of farm animals (cattle, sheep, pigs, fowl)
- Stop trade and travel across international borders (eg. Foot and mouth disease, BSE)
- Threaten food security for people in developing world
- Spillover of pathogens from wildlife to domestic animals drives emergence of new infectious diseases that threaten health of humans and livestock
- Pathogens of humans and domestic animals also threaten wildlife and biodiversity
- Use of antibiotics in farm animals threaten efficacy of these wonder drugs for animal and human health
COVID and why we must care about infectious diseases
- COVID came from animals, and caused pandemic where millions died
- Therefore veterinarians play an important role in the study of infectious diseases in humans because of the role of animal infectious diseases.
Foot and mouth outbreak UK 2001
- Highly contagious disease within cloven-hoofed animals
- Killed millions of cows and sheep, rarely affected humans. But did have a huge economic role (loss in farming and tourism)
Rinderpest in Africa
- Highly infectious viral disease of cattle
- Virus is a multi-host pathogen- affected all even toed ungulates but different species were affected differently.
- Cattle and buffalo had 100% mortality whereas less serious for sheep and goats. And pigs and deer were asymptomatic
- Close cousin of measles
- Imported to Ethiopia by Italians in 1880s, virus spread and killed more than 90% of domestic cattle and wild ungulates
- Resulted in many individuals starving to death which shows how infectious disease can threaten food security
What factors influence disease ecology?
host
pathogen
environment