Summary - IPC Module 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Microorganism description

A

-too small to be seen without the aid of a microscope
-<0.1 mm
-usually unicellular
-also called “germs”, “microbes“, “bugs”

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2
Q

Groups of Microorganisms

A

in order of decreasing size:

  1. Protozoa - unicellular animals; move - flagella or ameboid motion (eg microbe Giardia that causes “beaver fever“)
  2. Fungi - primitive plants
    yeasts - unicellular (eg. Candida – oral “yeast”)
    molds - multicellular (eg. microbe that causes ringworm/athletes foot)
  3. Bacteria - unicellular, no organized nucleus, rigid cell wall (eg. causative agent of Strept throat, Staph infections, Salmonella infections)
  4. Viruses - a bit of DNA or RNA surrounded by protein coat and sometimes lipid coat; grow only in other living cells (e.g. influenza virus, mumps, measles, rubell)
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3
Q

Size of Microbes

A

unit of measurement = micrometer = 1/1000 mm

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4
Q

Shapes of Bacteria

A

round = cocci (coccus)
rectangular = rods/bacilli (bacillus)
spiral/curved = spirilla (spirillum)

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5
Q

Gram Reaction of Bacteria

A
  1. Bacteria stained with gram’s staining procedure, appear dark blue (gram positive) or red (gram negative); determined by cell wall structure
  2. Why the gram reaction is important:
    first step in identifying bacteria (look at shape and gram/color reaction)
    determines effectiveness of antibiotics
    determines effectiveness of disinfectants
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6
Q

Bacterial Endospores

A
  1. Only a few bacteria (some gram positive bacilli such as tetanus, gangrene, botulism, anthrax) can form these under adverse conditions (too dry, too cold, lack of nutrients).
  2. Spores vegetate (start growing) when growth conditions become good
  3. Spores resist drying, heat and disinfectants (i.e. hard to kill)
    heat: may take 121°C to kill
    disinfectants: require high level disinfectant and long exposure time
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7
Q

Bacterial Growth

A
  1. Reproduce by binary fission (Time for this to occur (for population to double) = generation time = 15-30 minutes for rapidly growing bacteria, under ideal conditions (enough food, H20, correct temperature))
  2. In lab, grow bacteria on culture media
  3. Colony = visible mass of bacteria that forms on surface of solid culture media; usually takes 18-24 hours to form from 1 original cell; each colony is a clone - all descendants of a single bacterial cell.
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8
Q

Bacteria Growth Curve

A

4 Phases:

  1. Lag - adapting to new environment (no symptoms, incubation phase)
  2. Log - max reproduction (full blown symptoms, acute phase)
  3. Stationary - no change in # (no better, no worse)

(on the mend)

  1. Death - spores may form (convalescence)
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9
Q

Viral Characteristics

A

Distinctive features:
- metabolically inert - can multiply only in living host cells
- contain DNA or RNA, not both
- have protein coat that surrounds nucleic acid ± lipid envelope

Strangely, lipid viruses are generally easier to destroy than those with only a protein coat. (exception Hepatitis B – lipid virus survives 7 days on surfaces)

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10
Q

Multiplication of Animal Viruses

A
  1. Attachment to complementary site on host cell membrane
  2. Penetration
  3. Viral nucleic acid → nucleus: takes command of host cell and directs synthesis of new viral components
  4. Synthesis of viral components:
    nucleic acid - in nucleus
    protein coat - in cytoplasm
  5. Assembly of viral components
  6. Release from host cell
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11
Q

Effects of Viruses on Host Cell

A

Usually host cell dies (lysis; diversion of metabolic pathways; destroyed by host’s own lymphocytes)

Host cell may be transformed into tumor cell

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12
Q

Control of Viruses

A

Antibiotics have NO effect

Antiviral drugs : acyclovir; ZDV etc

More and more anti virals being developed. Problem is that viruses are inside host cells – have to develop drugs which will destroy viruses without destroying host cells

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