Infection and Response

    Cards (34)

    • There Are Several Types of Pathogen
    • Bacteria
      • Very small living cells about 1/100 the size of your body cell, which can reproduce rapidly inside your body
      • They can make you feel ill by producing toxins and poisons that damage your cells and tissues
    • Viruses
      • Not cells, they're tiny, about 1/100th the size of a bacterium
      • They can reproduce rapidly inside your body
      • They live inside your cells and replicate themselves using the cells' machinery to produce many copies of themselves
      • The cell will usually then burst, releasing all the new viruses
      • This cell damage is what makes you feel ill
    • Protists
      • Single-celled eukaryotes
    • Fungi
      • Come in different shapes
    • Viral diseases
      • Measles
      • HIV
      • Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV)
    • Ways pathogens can be spread
      • Direct contact
      • Air
      • Water
    • Pathogens can be picked up by touching contaminated surfaces including the skin
    • Pathogens can be spread by coughing or sneezing which makes small droplets containing the pathogen become airborne
    • Fungal diseases
      • Rose Black Spot
    • Rose Black Spot is a fungal disease that causes purple or black spots to develop on the leaves, which can then turn yellow and drop off
    • The reduced photosynthesis can mean the plant doesn't grow very well
    • The disease can spread through the environment in water or by the wind
    • Gardeners can treat the disease using fungicides and by stripping the plant of its affected leaves, which then need to be destroyed
    • Malaria is a disease caused by a protist
    • Malaria is spread by mosquitoes that feed on infected blood
    • Malaria can be treated with antimalarial drugs and prevented by using insecticides and avoiding mosquito bites
    • Salmonella and gonorrhoea are two bacterial diseases
    • Salmonella
      Bacteria that cause food poisoning
    • Gonorrhoea
      A sexually transmitted disease
    • Gonorrhoea is caused by bacteria and can be treated with antibiotics
    • Destroying vectors, isolating infected individuals, and vaccination can help prevent the spread of communicable diseases
    • White blood cells
      • They can consume foreign cells and digest them (phagocytosis)
      • They can produce antibodies that lock onto and help destroy invading pathogens
      • They can produce antitoxins that counteract toxins produced by invading bacteria
    • Antibodies
      Specific molecules produced by white blood cells that lock onto and help destroy invading pathogens
    • When a person is infected with a pathogen, their body produces antibodies specific to that pathogen, making them naturally immune to future infections by that pathogen
    • Vaccination
      Introducing a weakened or dead form of a pathogen to stimulate the immune system to produce antibodies, protecting against future infection
    • Vaccination has pros and cons - it protects against future infections but carries a small risk of adverse reactions
    • Drugs
      Some just relieve symptoms, others can cure the underlying problem
    • Many drugs were originally discovered in plants
    • Bacteria can become resistant to antibiotics over time
    • Penicillin was the first widely used antibiotic, discovered from a fungus
    • It's important to complete a full course of antibiotics to prevent antibiotic resistance developing
    • Drug testing
      • Involves three main stages: preclinical testing, clinical trials, and regulatory approval
      • Clinical trials are often double-blind, placebo-controlled studies to ensure objectivity
    • The placebo effect can influence the results of drug trials, so it's important to use a placebo control group
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