lecture 32- the ecology of human infectious diseases Flashcards

1
Q

What are the different types of agents?

A

1- Bacterial
2- Viral
3- Fungal
4- Parasitic
5- Prion

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2
Q

Explain how the following are all related: host, vector, agent, and environment.

A

Host: organism harboring the disease.

Vector: organisms that carry and transmit the infectious pathogen to the host.

Agent: the microbe that causes the disease.

Environment: the external factors that allow transmission.

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3
Q

What is zoonoses (zoonotics)?

A

Diseases and infections of vertebrate animals that can be transmitted to humans.

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4
Q

What are the 2 kinds of zoonotic diseases?

A

Emerging:
- Newly appear in humans (or now rapidly increasing in incidence or range)
- E.g., Ebola, HIV/AIDS, COVID-19

Endemic:
- Occur intermittently
- Triggered by events
- E.g., Anthrax, leishmaniasis, Rift Valley fever

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5
Q

What is a zoonotic spillover?

A

Transmission of pathogens from wild animals to humans.

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6
Q

What are the seven major anthropogenic drivers of zoonotic disease emergence?

A

1- Increasing demand for animal protein.
2- Unsustainable agricultural intensification.
3- Increased use and exploitation of wildlife.
4- Unsustainable utilization of natural resources accelerated by urbanization, land use change, and extractive industries.
5- Travel and transportation.
6- Changes in food supply chains.
7- Climate change.

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7
Q

Explain the following anthropogenic driver of zoonotic diseases emergence: increasing demand for animal protein

A

Produce way more meat than we did before.
- Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa: rapid increase
- Per capita increase in animal consumption + population growth

Pigmeat is the most popular meat globally, but production of poultry increasing most rapidly.

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8
Q

Explain the following anthropogenic driver of zoonotic diseases emergence: unsustainable agricultural intensification

A

Increased demand –> intensification and industrialization of animal production

Genetically similar animals are vulnerable to infection.
- Close proximity, poor conditions.

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9
Q

Explain the following anthropogenic driver of zoonotic diseases emergence: increased use and exploitation of wildlife

A

Bushmeat: harvesting wild animals as a source of protein

Recreational hunting, decorative, medicinal, and commercial products

New roads in remote areas –> increase access

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10
Q

Explain the following anthropogenic driver of zoonotic diseases emergence: unsustainable utilization of natural resources accelerated by urbanization, land use change, extractive industries

A

Rapid urbanization leads to novel contacts with wildlife, livestock, and people
- Irrigation systems encourage vector-borne zoonoses
- Deforestation and fragmentation
- Ecological tourism
- Encroachment into wildlife habitats

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11
Q

Explain the following anthropogenic driver of zoonotic diseases emergence: travel and transportation

A

Diseases can move around the world faster than incubation periods

Increasing human travel and trade

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12
Q

Explain the following anthropogenic driver of zoonotic diseases emergence: changes in food supply chains

A

Increased opportunities for cross-contamination

Difficult to trace

Rapidly expanding and poorly managed wet markets

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13
Q

Explain the following anthropogenic driver of zoonotic diseases emergence: climate change

A

Zoonoses are climate sensitive and will thrive in warmer wetter climates.

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14
Q

What are the 2 ways in which viruses evolve?

A

1- Antigenic drift: Point mutations cause small changes in the surface antigens (H & N).
- These can lead to regional epidemics in populations that have had no previous exposure.

2- Antigenic shift: “Genetic reassortment” = the process by which the whole H-N combination changes.
- Produces novel flu strains distinct from all previous strains –> potentially causing a pandemic.

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15
Q

Why does corona virus have its name? What are its symptoms?

A

Named “corona” for the crown-like arrangement of spike-shaped proteins on the surface

Some cause mild upper respiratory illness (common cold)

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16
Q

What does SARS stand for?

A

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome

17
Q

What are the characteristics of SARS-CoV-2?

A
  • Enveloped virus
  • Spike (S) protein allow virus to bind and enter host cells
  • As with SARS-CoV, S protein binds with ACE-2 receptors on human cells (concentrated in upper and lower airways of lungs)
  • RNA is 30,000 letters long (one of the largest RNA viruses)
  • High mutation rate + proofreading (reduces negative mutations)
18
Q

What is the recent evidence for how covid arrived in Wuhan?

A

2 separate zoonotic transmissions

Bats –> intermediate host –> humans