micropara

Cards (115)

  • Communicable Disease
    An illness due to an infectious agent or its toxic products which is easily transmitted or communicated directly or indirectly from one person or animal to another
  • Communicable Diseases are Primary Cause of Mortality Gap between Rich and Poor Countries
  • Non-communicable diseases account for 59% of all deaths worldwide – estimated to rise from 28m in 1990 to 50m in 2020
  • Communicable Diseases that account for about 60% of deaths
    • HIV/AIDS
    • Malaria
    • Tuberculosis
    • Measles
    • Diarrheal disease
    • Acute respiratory infection
  • Communicable Disease
    Any disease that spreads from one host to another, either directly or indirectly
  • Contagious Disease
    Disease that easily spreads directly from one person to another
  • Infectious Disease
    Disease not transmitted by ordinary contact but require a direct inoculation of pathogenic agents (microbes). On the other hand, all contagious diseases are infectious.
  • All contagious diseases are communicable but not all communicable diseases are contagious
  • Both infectious and contagious diseases are communicable
  • Examples of communicable diseases
    • herpes, malaria, mumps, HIV/AIDS, influenza, chicken pox, ringworm, and whooping cough
  • Cancer is not a communicable disease
  • Carrier
    An individual who harbors the organism and is capable of transmitting it to a susceptible host without showing manifestations of the disease
  • Contact
    Any person or animal who is in close association with an infected person, animal, or freshly soiled material
  • Types of Diseases based on Occurrence
    • Sporadic Disease
    • Endemic Disease
    • Epidemic Disease
    • Pandemic Disease
  • Sporadic Disease
    Disease that occurs only occasionally & irregularly with no specific pattern
  • Endemic Disease
    Constantly present in a population, country or community
  • Epidemic Disease

    Patient acquire the disease in a relatively short period of time; greater than normal number of cases in an area within a short period of time
  • Pandemic Disease

    Epidemic disease that occurs worldwide
  • Types of Diseases based on Severity or Duration
    • Acute Disease
    • Chronic Disease
    • Latent Disease
  • Acute Disease

    Develops rapidly (rapid onset) but lasts only a short time
  • Chronic Disease
    Develops more slowly (insidious onset); disease likely to be continual or recurrent for long periods
  • Latent Disease
    Causative agent remains inactive for a time but then becomes active to produce symptoms of the disease
  • Types of Infections based on State of Host Resistance
    • Primary Infection
    • Secondary Infection
    • Subclinical (Inapparent Infection)
  • Primary Infection
    Acute infection that causes the initial illness
  • Secondary Infection

    One caused by an opportunistic pathogen after primary infection has weakened the body's defenses
  • Subclinical (Inapparent Infection)

    Does not cause any noticeable illness
  • Symptoms
    Subjective evidence of disease that is experienced or perceived; subjective changes in body function noted by patient but not apparent to an observer
  • Signs
    Objective evidence of a disease the physician can observe and measure
  • Syndrome
    A specific group of signs and symptoms that accompany a particular disease
  • Incidence
    The number of people in a population who develop a disease during a particular time period
  • Prevalence
    The number of people in a population who develop a disease, regardless of when it appeared; refers to both old and new cases
  • Stages of Disease
    • Incubation Period
    • Prodromal Period
    • Period of Illness
    • Period of Decline
    • Period of Convalescence
  • Incubation Period
    Time interval between the initial infection and the 1st appearance of any symptoms/signs; patient is not yet aware of the disease
  • Prodromal Period
    Early, mild appearance of symptoms of the disease
  • Period of Illness
    Time of greatest symptomatic experience (patient is sick); overt symptoms/signs of disease; WBC may increase or decrease; can result to death if immune response or medical intervention fails; communicable disease are most easily transmitted during this phase
  • Period of Decline

    Symptoms/signs subside; pathogen replication is brought under control; vulnerable to secondary infection
  • Period of Convalescence
    Replication of pathogenic organisms is stopped; regains strength and the body returns to its pre-diseased state; recovery has occurred
  • Conditions that Affect Infection Development
    • Pathogenicity
    • Infective dose
    • Virulence and Invasiveness
    • Organisms specificity
    • Resistance of the host
    • Immunity of the host
  • Pathogenicity
    Ability to cause disease
  • Infective dose

    Sufficient number of microorganisms needed to initiate infection