infection and response

Cards (41)

  • Pathogens
    Microorganisms that enter the body and cause communicable disease (infectious)
  • Pathogens
    • Plants and animals can be infected by them
  • Viral Diseases
    Diseases caused by viruses
  • Viral Diseases
    • Measles
    • HIV
    • Tobacco mosaic virus
  • Measles
    • Spread by droplets of liquid from sneezes and coughs
    • Symptoms include a red rash on the skin and a fever
    • Can be serious or even fatal and can lead to pneumonia
    • Most people are vaccinated against measles when they are very young
  • HIV
    • Spread by sexual contact or exchanging body fluids
    • Can be controlled by antiviral drugs which stop the viruses replicating
    • Attacks the cells in the immune system
    • If the immune system is badly damaged, the body cannot cope with other infections - this is the late stage and is called Aids
  • Tobacco mosaic virus
    • Affects plants
    • Parts of the leaves become discoloured
    • This means plants cannot carry out photosynthesis, affecting the plants growth
  • Bacterial Diseases
    Diseases caused by bacteria
  • Bacterial Diseases

    • Salmonella
    • Gonorrhoea
  • Salmonella
    • Causes food poisoning
    • Symptoms include fever, stomach cramps, vomiting and diarrhoea
    • Caused by the toxins produced by the bacteria
    • Food contaminated with salmonella can give you food poisoning
    • Most poultry in the UK will have had a vaccination against salmonella
  • Gonorrhoea
    • A sexually transmitted bacterial disease, passed on by sexual contact
    • Symptoms include pain when urinating and thick yellow/green discharge from the vagina or penis
    • To prevent the spread, people should be treated with antibiotics and use a condom
  • How to prevent the spread of pathogens
    • Being hygienic - washing hands thoroughly
    • Destroying vectors - killing vectors by using insecticides or destroying their habitat
    • Isolation - isolating an infected person will prevent the spread
    • Vaccination - people cannot develop the infection and then pass it on
  • Fungal Diseases

    Diseases caused by fungi
  • Fungal Diseases
    • Rose black spot
  • Rose black spot
    • Shows as black spots on the leaves of the plant
    • Means less photosynthesis occurs, so the plant does not grow as well
    • Spread by the wind or the water
    • Can be treated by using fungicides and taking the leaves off the infected plant
  • Protist Diseases
    Diseases caused by protists
  • Protist Diseases

    • Malaria
  • Malaria
    • Caused by a protist
    • Mosquitoes are the vectors, becoming infected when they feed on an infected animal
    • The protist is inserted into the blood vessel
    • Malaria can cause fever and it can also be fatal
  • Bacteria
    • Small cells that can reproduce very quickly in the body
    • They produce toxins that make you feel ill, damaging your cells and tissues
  • Viruses
    • Much smaller than bacteria
    • They can also reproduce quickly in the body
    • Viruses live inside your cells where they replicate
    • They then burst out of the cell, releasing new viruses
  • Protists
    • Eukaryotes (multicellular)
    • Some are parasites which live on or inside other organisms, often carried by a vector
  • Fungi
    • Sometimes single celled, others have hyphae that grow and penetrate human skin and the surface of plants
    • They can produce spores which can spread to other plants
  • How Pathogens Are Spread
    • Water - by drinking dirty water, e.g. cholera
    • Air - carried by air and breathed in, e.g. influenza
    • Direct contact - touching contaminated surfaces including the skin, e.g. athlete's foot
  • Plant Deficiency Symptoms

    • Stunted growth
    • Yellow leaves
    • Patches of decay
    • Abnormal growth
    • Malformed stems or leaves
    • Discolouration
  • Plant Defences
    • Physical - waxy cuticle, cell walls, layer of dead cells
    • Mechanical - thorns, hairs, leaves that droop or curl, mimicking other organisms
  • White Blood Cells
    • Phagocytosis - engulf pathogens and digest them
    • Produce antitoxins to neutralise toxins
    • Produce antibodies that lock onto pathogen antigens, allowing white blood cells to destroy the pathogens
  • Antibodies are specific to one antigen and will only work on that pathogen
  • Painkillers
    Relieve the pain and symptoms, but do not tackle the cause
  • Antibiotics
    Kill the bacteria causing the problem, but do not work on viruses
  • Viruses are very difficult to kill because they live inside the body cells
  • Stages of Drug Testing
    • Pre-clinical testing - Drugs tested on human cells/tissues, then tested on living animals
    • Clinical testing - Tested on healthy human volunteers, starting with low dose then testing on people with the illness to find optimum dose
  • Placebo
    A substance that is like the drug but does not do anything
  • Placebo Effect
    When the patient thinks the treatment will work even though their treatment isn't doing anything
  • Blind Trial
    When the patient does not know whether they are getting the drug or the placebo
  • Double-Blind Trial

    When both the doctor and the patient do not know whether they are getting the drug
  • Vaccination
    • Involves an injection of a dead or weakened version of the pathogen
    • Carries antigens which cause the body to produce antibodies to attack the pathogen
    • If infected again, the white blood cells can produce antibodies quickly
  • Body's Defence System
    • Skin acts as a barrier to pathogens
    • Hairs and mucus in nose trap particles
    • Trachea and bronchi secrete mucus and have cilia to trap pathogens
    • Stomach contains hydrochloric acid to kill pathogens
  • Monoclonal Antibodies
    Identical antibodies produced by fusing a B lymphocyte from a mouse with a tumour cell to create a hybridoma cell
  • Uses of Monoclonal Antibodies
    • Pregnancy testing
    • Treating diseases - anti-cancer drugs can be attached to target cancer cells
    • Research to find specific substances
  • Monoclonal antibodies have more side-effects than originally thought, so are not used by doctors as much as was first thought