Summary - IPC Module 1 Flashcards
Microorganism description
-too small to be seen without the aid of a microscope
-<0.1 mm
-usually unicellular
-also called “germs”, “microbes“, “bugs”
Groups of Microorganisms
in order of decreasing size:
- Protozoa - unicellular animals; move - flagella or ameboid motion (eg microbe Giardia that causes “beaver fever“)
- Fungi - primitive plants
yeasts - unicellular (eg. Candida – oral “yeast”)
molds - multicellular (eg. microbe that causes ringworm/athletes foot) - Bacteria - unicellular, no organized nucleus, rigid cell wall (eg. causative agent of Strept throat, Staph infections, Salmonella infections)
- 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)
Size of Microbes
unit of measurement = micrometer = 1/1000 mm
Shapes of Bacteria
round = cocci (coccus)
rectangular = rods/bacilli (bacillus)
spiral/curved = spirilla (spirillum)
Gram Reaction of Bacteria
- Bacteria stained with gram’s staining procedure, appear dark blue (gram positive) or red (gram negative); determined by cell wall structure
- 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
Bacterial Endospores
- 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).
- Spores vegetate (start growing) when growth conditions become good
- 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
Bacterial Growth
- 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))
- In lab, grow bacteria on culture media
- 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.
Bacteria Growth Curve
4 Phases:
- Lag - adapting to new environment (no symptoms, incubation phase)
- Log - max reproduction (full blown symptoms, acute phase)
- Stationary - no change in # (no better, no worse)
(on the mend)
- Death - spores may form (convalescence)
Viral Characteristics
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)
Multiplication of Animal Viruses
- Attachment to complementary site on host cell membrane
- Penetration
- Viral nucleic acid → nucleus: takes command of host cell and directs synthesis of new viral components
- Synthesis of viral components:
nucleic acid - in nucleus
protein coat - in cytoplasm - Assembly of viral components
- Release from host cell
Effects of Viruses on Host Cell
Usually host cell dies (lysis; diversion of metabolic pathways; destroyed by host’s own lymphocytes)
Host cell may be transformed into tumor cell
Control of Viruses
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