4. how viruses are transmitted Flashcards

1
Q

define incidence

A

number of new infections over a period of time

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2
Q

define prevalence

A

total number of people infected in a population, new and old, over a period of time

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3
Q

define endemic

A

normal number of cases in a population. the number can be high, low, and even seasonal

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4
Q

define epidemic

A

an increase in the average number of cases in an area

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5
Q

define pandemic

A

an epidemic that has spread to several countries or continents

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6
Q

define Ro - reproductive number

A

on average, how many people on infected person will infect in a susceptible population

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7
Q

define communicable

A

an infectious disease transmitted from one source to another

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8
Q

what are the ways a disease can be communicable

A
  1. person to person
  2. animal to person
  3. fomite to person (phone, pen, shopping cart handle)
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9
Q

define contagious

A

derived from contact. considered a very communicable disease spread by contact or proximity to an infected person

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10
Q

how is a contagious diesease transmitted

A
  1. respiratory droplets
  2. fecal/oral
  3. contact with skin or abrasion
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11
Q

define non-contagious infections

A

still communicable but not by casual contact.

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12
Q

how are non-contagious infections transmitted

A
  1. secual contact - semen, vaginal fluid, or genital lesions
  2. parenteral/injection - shared needles
  3. congenital - mother to fetus
  4. perinatal - pregnancy (after 24 weeks), during or shortly after birth
  5. arboviral - mosquito, tick
  6. zoonotic - transfer from infected non-human animals to humans
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13
Q

winter/spring is the season for which generally types of viruses

A

enveloped and transmitted through respiratory route and many gastroenteric viruses

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14
Q

summer/early fall is the peak season for which viruses

A

arboviruses and picornaviruses

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15
Q

define incubation period

A

time from infection until symptoms appear

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16
Q

define latent period

A

person is infected, but no virus is shed from the body. time from infection until you become infectious and capable of spreading the disease to others

17
Q

define infectious phase

A

when infected individual can spread the disease to others.
- person can become infectious before symptoms appear

18
Q

define prodromal phase

A

generalized symptoms that can occur in many viral infections BEFORE specific symptoms arise that might aid in diagnosis
- ex: time someone feels sick before the measles-defining rash

19
Q

the iceberg concept of infection from top to bottom:

A

death
severe disease
mild illness
infection without symptoms
exposure without infection

20
Q

define horizontal transmission

A

human to human

21
Q

define vertical transmission

A

from mother to infant

22
Q

define indirect zoonotic spread

A

with insect intermediary called the vector

23
Q

define direct zoonotic spread

A

from infected non-human animal to the human

24
Q

generalized infection is the same as ______

A

systemic

25
Q

does localized infection spread throughout the body

A

no, no viremia. some but not all infections of the respiratory tract/GI tract, eye , skin

26
Q

define viremia

A

virus present in the blood

27
Q

localized infection length of incubation time?

A

shorter incubation times, usually days

28
Q

which Ig more important in localized infection

A

IgA

29
Q

lifelong immunity present for localized infections?

A

not always lifelong immunity, sometimes shorter mucosal immunity

30
Q

generalized infection spread throughout the body?

A

yes. spreads through the body via blood or nervous system

31
Q

generalized infection length of incubation time?

A

longer incubation times, weeks to months

32
Q

which Ig more important in generalized infection

A

IgG

33
Q

lifelong immunity present for generalized infection?

A

yes. usually lifelong immunity