Bacterial pathogenesis - L5A Flashcards

1
Q

what is an infection?

A

growth of micro-organisms within a host

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2
Q

what is a disease

A

damage that impairs host function

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3
Q

what is a pathogen

A

microorganism capable of causing disease

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4
Q

what is pathogenesis

A

process of disease

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5
Q

what is adhesion

A

ability of a microbe to attach to a surface

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6
Q

what is adhesins

A

bacterial factors mediating adherence

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7
Q

what’s colonisation

A

growth of microoganism in host

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8
Q

what does subclinical mean

A

asymptomatic infection

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9
Q

what is latent?

A

an infection with the potential to become active

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10
Q

what does opportunistic mean

A

infection caused by a microorganism that would not normally cause disease in a healthy host

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11
Q

what is pyogenic

A

pus forming microorganisms

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12
Q

what is fulminant

A

sudden and rapidly developing infections

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13
Q

infection process:

A
  1. exposure
  2. adherence
  3. invasion
  4. multiplication
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14
Q

what did Robert Koch work with?

A

bacillus anthracis (anthrax)

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15
Q

what did Robert koch show?

A
  • Showed bacilli always present in those with infection
  • merely correlative and wanted to prove causation
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16
Q

what was Koch’s four hypothesis?

A
  1. the pure culture grown must produce the same disease when inoculated into a healthy animal
  2. the same microbe must be re-isolated from the experimentally infected animal
  3. microbe must be present
  4. microbe should be isolated from host
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17
Q

why was koch’s hypothesis revolutionary

A
  • mostly hold true
  • opened door to new treatments
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18
Q

why do microbes use receptors?

A

stick to and enter cells

replicate on the cell surface

19
Q

why do some bacteria have extensions?

A

they mediate attachment

20
Q

why do some bacteria have extensions?

A

they mediate attachment

21
Q

where does colonisation begin?

A

on mucous membranes

22
Q

what is invasion?

A

Ability of pathogen to enter into tissues and cause disease

23
Q

2 things infections can be

A

localised or systemic

24
Q

give an example of a localised infections

A

staphylococcus aureus skin boil

25
Q

give an example of systemic infection

A

septicaemia

26
Q

what leads to septicaemia

A

If bacteria multiply in bloodstream and spread this can be fatal

27
Q

is staphylococcus aureus gram + or -

A

positive

28
Q

give facts about staphylococcus aureus

A
  • Spreads into cell cytoplasm
  • Quickly invades range of cell types
  • Replicated intracellularly in small vacuoles
29
Q

what’s virulence

A

The outcome of the interaction between host and pathogen

30
Q

what are virulence factors?

A

Factors promoting host damage

31
Q

is virulence measurable?

A

yes

32
Q

give examples of virulence factors?

A
  • toxins
  • pili
  • capsule
33
Q

what is toxicity?

A

ability to cause disease by a toxin

34
Q

what are exotoxins?

A

toxic proteins released from pathogen as it grows

35
Q

what are endotoxins?

A

toxic lipopolysaccharide in gram negative bacteria

36
Q

what is enterotoxin

A

site of action is small intenstine

37
Q

what are the 3 classes of exotoxins?

A
  • AB toxins
  • cytolytic toxins
  • superantigen toxins
38
Q

what does the B subunit do in AB toxins?

A

binds to host cell molecule

39
Q

what does the A subunit do in AB toxins

A

across cytoplasmic membrane where it damages cell

40
Q

what do the cytolytic toxins do?

A

damage host cell membranes and kill cells

41
Q

what do superantigen toxins

A

drive cytokine storms

42
Q

give an example of a skin infection:

A

streptococcus pyogenes

43
Q

give an example of a respiratory infection:

A

Haemophilus influenzae:

44
Q

give an example of a gastrointestinal infection

A

Campylobacter jejuni: