B6 - Preventing and treating disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are the proteins on the surface of a cell called

A

antigens

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2
Q

How do antibodies kill pathogens

A

white blood cells make antibodies that join to antigens and inactivate them

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3
Q

What is the process of immunisation

A

a vaccine containing dead or inactive form of disease is injected
- immune system is stimulated and produces antibodies
- these are stored by memory cells

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4
Q

What is the function of memory cells

A

remember the antibodies for a particular pathogen sp they can be produced quickly

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5
Q

What does the MMR vaccine protect against

A

measles, mumps, rubella

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6
Q

What is herd immunity

A

the idea that if a large proportion of the population is immune, then the pathogen will rarely spread even if some people aren’t immune

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7
Q

What are the function of painkillers
- what are two common examples

A

relieve pain
- aspirin and paracetamol

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8
Q

What are some drugs that kill bacteria outside the body
- why can’t we use them

A

antiseptics and disinfectants
- they are too poisonous in the body

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9
Q

What drugs are used to kill bacteria in the body

A

antibiotics

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10
Q

how to antibiotics work

A

damage bacterial cells without damaging human cells

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11
Q

How can antibiotics be effective really fast

A

direct injection into bloodstream

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12
Q

Why are antibiotics not effective against viruses

A

viruses live and reproduce inside other cells. It is hard to develop drugs that kill onlythe virus

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13
Q

Why are some bacteria not able to be killed by antobiotics

A

they have mutated to become resistant

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14
Q

What were drugs traditionally extracted from
- what is used now

A

plants or microorganisms e.g. moulds
- adapted chemicals from plants, microorganisms and animals

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15
Q

What are two common drugs extracted from foxgloves
- what impact do they have on the body

A

digitalis and digoxin
- helps strengthen the heartbeat

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16
Q

what is the issue with lots of traditional medicine

A

they are actually poisonous

17
Q

What does aspirin originate from

A

a compound in the bark of willow trees

18
Q

How was penicillin discovered

A
  • Fleming left the lid off of one of his moulds of bacteria.
  • a clear ring had formed in the jelly
  • he realised something killed the bacteria
  • he called that substance penicillin
  • 10 years later Chain and Florey extracted penicillin
19
Q

who discovered penicillin

A

alexander fleming

20
Q

What mould is penicillin from

A

penicillium

21
Q

How are most drugs made nowadays

A

synthesised in the pharmaceutical industry

22
Q

What are the three things that must be measured for in new drugs

A
  • toxicity
  • efficacy
  • dosage
23
Q

What are the stages of trials for new medicine

A

preclinical - animals, tissues, cells
clinical - on healthy people, infected, volunteers

24
Q

What are the stages of a double blind trial

A

some people are given a placebo, some have the actual drug. Neither the patient nor the doctor knows which is which. health is monitored carefully

25
Q

What happens after a medicine has been confirmed in a double blind trial

A

peer review, the most effective and cost-efficient ones are used

26
Q

What are hybridoma cells

A

combining mice cells with cancer cells

27
Q

What are monoclonal antibodies

A

proteins used to target particular cellsor chemicals

28
Q

What cells are combined for monoclonal antibodies

A

T-lymphocytes and cancer cells to make hybridomas, which divide fast and produces antibodies. These are cloned to make monoclonal antibodies

29
Q

What are 5 common uses of monoclonal antibodies

A
  • pregnancy tests
  • diagnosis of diseases
  • monitoring levels in the body
  • research for molecules
  • treating disease
30
Q

How to pregnancy tests work

A

monoclonal antibodies bind to HCG (produced in pregnancy) if it is present and a colour change occurs

31
Q

how do monoclonal antibodies discover disease

A

they are made to bind to specific antigens, and carry markers which makes it easy to see where they have collected. This is used to detect problems

32
Q

How to drug tests work

A

monoclonal antibodies bind to the drug if present

33
Q

What are three ways monoclonal antibodies can be used to kill cancer cells

A
  • direct use of antibodies to trigger immune system to destroy cancer cells
  • using monocolonal antibodies to block receptors on the surface of cancer cells which stops them growing and dividing
  • carry drugs or radioactive substances for radiation therapy
34
Q

What are the benefits of using monoclonal antibodies

A

only bind to a specific pathogen
- can produce lots of them

35
Q

What are the disadvantages of using monoclonal antibodies

A
  • costly
  • not widely available
  • mouse cells cause side effects
  • producing correct ones are hard
36
Q
A