Infection and Responce

Cards (39)

  • Pathogens are microorganisms that cause communicable diseases
  • Pathogens can be spread through
    Droplets , vectors , water , food , direct contact
  • Viruses reproduce rapidly , which causes damage to cells
  • Bacteria can produce toxins that damage tissue
  • Fungi penetrate human skin and surface of plants
  • Protists are single celled organisms that are eukaryotic
  • HIV can be transmitted in blood when drug users share needles
  • Skin is a non-specific barrier that prevents pathogens from entering the body
  • The nose has hairs and mucus that trap pathogens before they reach lung
  • eyes secrete tears that have enzymes that destroy pathogens
  • the trachea is lined with cells that have tiny hairs called cilia that move mucus and pathogens upwards towards the throat
  • cilia reduces the amount of pathogens entering your lungs
  • goblet cells produce mucus that act as a physical barrier that traps pathogens
  • goblet cells are found in the trachea
  • The stomach contains hydrochloric acid that kills bacteria
  • physical barriers 

    skin , nose , trachea and bronchi
  • Cells in the body are covered in antigens
  • Lymphocytes recognise proteins on the surface of pathogens called antigens
  • Lymphocytes detect foreign substances on the cells and can produce antibodies
  • Lymphocytes can also call over phagocytes which can destroy them by phagocytosis: engulfing and digesting.
  • Phagocytes surround any pathogens in the blood and engulf them
  • Vaccinations expose us to the antigens of a pathogen so we can develop immunity to it
  • Vaccinations contain small quantities of dead, weakened or inactive forms of pathogen
  • Malaria is spread by mosquitos
  • Malaria Symptoms 

    re-occurring fever that can be fatal
  • Malaria Preventions
    killing mosquitos, mosquito net, vaccination
  • Aspirin originates from the bark of willow trees
  • Digitalis originates from foxgloves
  • Penicillin was discovered by Fleming from Penicillium mould
  • Efficiency is how well the drug works
  • Toxicity is how harmful the drug is
  • Dosage is how much of the drug should be given
  • Stage 1 of drug testing is too test the drug on human cells and tissues
  • Stage two of drug testing is to test it on live animals as our bodies are similar to theirs
  • Stage 3A of drug testing is to test the drug on healthy volunteers to find the maximum dosage before side effects occcur
  • Stage 3B of drug testing is to give the drug to people suffering from the illness to discover the optimum dosage
  • In a double-trail test neither the doctor or the patient know who has taken the drug - only the researcher
  • A placebo is a substance or treatment that contains no active drug
  • its important for medical trails to be double blind as it avoids any bias by the patients or/and the doctors