Pathogenesis of Infectious Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

Microbial diseases (infectious diseases) are the result of the interaction between microorganisms (_____, ________, _____) and the host organism.

A

adhering,penetrating and multiplying

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2
Q

what is a microorganism

A

-organism invisible to the naked eye (viruses, bacteria, fungi and some parasites)
-majority are harmless/useful

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3
Q

what is an infection

A

: Penetration of a microorganism, or a part of it capable of multiplication, into a host organism, producing apparent (= disease) or inapparent (= no disease) changes (clinical manifestations).

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4
Q

difference between infection vs colonization

A

infection causes apparent or inapparent changes whereas colonization does not cause any change at all (e.g colonization of the skin with micrococci)

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5
Q

What makes inapparent infections challenging?

A

there are no obvious symptoms

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6
Q

What is contamination?

A

deposition of microorganisms without multiplication (e.g., contamination of sterile dressings by falling dust containing bacteria; contamination of drinking water with sewage)

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7
Q

When do clinical infections occur?

A

when changes result in functional damage to the infected
host.

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8
Q

definition of
clinical infection
sub-clinical infection
no infection

A
  • disease
    -sub-clinical infection
    -no infection
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9
Q

how are microorganisms capable of producing clinical or subclinical infection classified?

A
  1. pathogenicity, ability of a microorganism to produce disease; invasiveness + toxigenicity
  2. virulence, of a microorganism, within a group, to cause damage resulting in disease (in other words the degree of pathogenicity of a particular microorganism).
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10
Q

what are opportunistic pathogens?

A

rarely cause disease in healthy humans, but often do so in humans whose defense mechanisms have been compromised or breached by, for example, a burn or
instrumentation.

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11
Q

define transmissibility? routes of entry?

A

the transfer of an effective challenge amount from a source to a host

a) Inhalation
b) Ingestion
c) Break in protective barrier
d) Direct deposit

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12
Q

define toxigenicity

A

ability to produce toxins

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13
Q

define and describe invasiveness?

A

Microorganisms overcome their host’s immediate defence mechanisms through their ability to:
- adhere to and persist on body surfaces
- protect themselves against bactericidal substances present in body
fluids
- avoid ingestion and destruction by phagocytes

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14
Q

how are bacteria’s able to invade,evade the host

A

surface structures (pili, fimbriae) - adhere to specific receptors present on body cell
surfaces.
Capsules - usually polysaccharides, protect the microorganisms against leucocytes
Enzymes - that, although not toxic per se, may contribute towards the virulence of the
pathogen that elaborates them such as coagulase and hyaluronidase
coagulase: enzyme accelerating the clotting of plasma; the clot formed around the focus of infection constitutes a barrier against leukocytes and body fluids.
hyaluronidase: enzyme hydrolyses polymerizes hyaluronic acid;liquidys polymer

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15
Q

what are toxins? types?

A

substances produced by bacteria that damage host tissues or upset systems vital to the host
-exotoxin and endotoxin

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16
Q

what are exotoxins?

A

proteins excreted by living bacteria cells, active in small concentrations (botulinum can kill a ,am in a dose of 0.0001) often thermolabile (heat sensitive)

17
Q

what are endotoxins?

A

liberate when cell disintegrates, specific less potent than exotoxins , produce marked clinical effects pyrexia (fever), mailaics , shock. heat resistant and thermostable.
-harder to destroy due to the increase in temperature.