by Mary "Ryleigh" Watkins 6 years ago
207
Patient responds to infection and symptoms decline
Agent multiplies at high levels and exhibits greatest virulence
earliest notable symptoms of infection appear
Initial contact appearance of first symptoms
medical and dental personnel who must constantly handle contaminated materials and risk picking up pathogens mechanically and accidentally transferring them to other patients
individuals who shelter the infectious agent for a long period after recovery from latency of the infectious agent
they continue to shed viable microbes and convey the infection to others
recuperating patients without symptoms
microbes are multiplying
infected but shows no symptoms of disease
Long-term or permanent damage to organs and tissues
microbe can periodically become active and produce recurrent disease
A dormant state
An individual who inconspicuously shelters a pathogen and can spread it to others without knowing
Distinct from a reservoir
A permanent place for agent to reside
Presence of viruses in the blood, maybe actively multiplying
Small numbers of bacteria are present in the blood
not multiplying
General state
microbes are multiplying in the blood and are present in large numbers
Decrease in white blood cells
Increase in white blood cells
Abscess
Granuloma
Edema
Accumulation of fluid in afflicted tissue
Inapparent
Host is infected -> no disease
Subclinical
Patient experiences no symptoms or disease and does not seek medical attention
Asymptomatic
A disease identified or defined by a certain complex of signs and symptoms
Subjective evidence of disease as sensed by the patient
Any objective evidence of disease as noted by an observer
Progress and persist over a long period of time
Have short-lived effects
Come on rapidly
Primary infection is complicated by another infection caused by a different microbe
initial infection
Polymicrobial diseases:
human bite infections
dental caries
wound infections
gas gangrene
Several agents establish themselves simultaneously at the infection site
other mixed infections
one microbe creates an environment that enables another microbe to invade
synergistic infections
microbes cooperate in breaking down tissue
Examples:
Toxemia:
infection remains localized, toxins are carried through the blood to the target tissue
Streptococcal pharyngitis:
scarlet fever
Tuberculosis
Exists when the infectious agent breaks loose from a local infection and is carried to other tissues
Infectious agents can travel by means of nerves or cerebrospinal fluid
When an infection spreads to several sites and tissue fluids, usually in the bloodstream.
Fungal:
cryptococcosis
histoplasmosis
Bacterial:
typhoid fever
anthrax
brucellosis
Viral:
chickenpox
rubella
measles
Microbe enters the body and remains confined to a specific tissue
Warts
Fungal skin infections
Boils
Merely transport it without being infected
Not necessary to the life cycle of an infectious agent
Site of multiplication or end of life cycle
Actively participates in a pathogen’s life cycle
Majority of vectors are arthropods (insects)
Highly communicable
Indirect
Air
Waste
Water
Food
Direct
Peripheral
Droplets
Kissing
Not a continuous source of infection
milk
placenta
sperm
ovum
establish itself in a host
invade
allow a pathogen to cause infection in the host
Circumvent some part of the phagocytic process
Exotoxin
Many types
Secreted by a living bacterial cell to the infected tissues
Endotoxin
Only found in gram-negative bacteria
Shed from the outer membrane
Not actively secreted
promote the spread of microbes into deeper tissues
Dissolve host’s defense barriers
Break down & inflict damage on tissues
Herpes simplex virus
Cytomegalovirus
Rubella
Other diseases:
chlamydia
AIDS
varicella-zoster virus
coxsackievirus
syphilis
Toxoplasmosis
A few microbes cross the placenta and are spread by the umbilical vein into the fetal tissues.
Other infections are transmitted perinatally as the child passes through the birth canal.
Permits diffusion of dissolved nutrients and gases
Formed by maternal and fetal tissues–Separates the blood between mother/fetus
urethra
cervix
vagina
external genitalia
Penis
Microbes often transferred from one site to another
nasal cavity
oral cavity
Adapted to survive digestive enzymes and abrupt pH changes
conjunctiva
punctures
inapparent
tiny
abrasions
Nicks
previously silent infection
normal biota
animal
another person
enviornment
Blood-feeding animals are the most common transmitters of pathogens:
Mosquitoes
Fleas
Ticks
Candida albicans
Chlamydia
Herpes simplex
Source of neonatal infections that infect the infant as it passes through the birth canal.
Feces containing pathogens creates a public health problem
Helminth worms and eggs release eggs and cysts through the stool
Resulting diarrhea provides a rapid exit for the pathogen