Lecture 2: Infectious Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Infectious diseases in the developing worlds vs Now

A

Before:
- 25 million deaths circa 1998 (per year)
- 1/3 of the world had tuberculosis
- 4 million died per year from curable diseases from bad water
- 6 million died per year from HIV and Malaria

Now:
- 17 million die per year (down 1/3)
- 1/4 of the world had tuberculosis
- 500k children die per year from curable diseases from bad water
- 405k million died per year from Malaria (228 million cases); 690k from HIV (1.7 million new infections and 38 million total)

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2
Q

What causes malaria?

A

protozoan parasite Plasmodium falciparum (severe) or vivax (limited and nonlethal)

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3
Q

How is malaria transmitted?

A

anopheles mosquito

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4
Q

How has malaria cases been reduced?

A

widespread use DDT (mosquito repellant) until resistance to treatment evolved

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5
Q

What is the leading global infectious disease killer worldwide?

A

Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV/AIDS)

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6
Q

What does 1/2 of people infected with HIV also develop?

A

Tuberculosis (1/3 of deaths)

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7
Q

What does HIV do?

A

infects immune system cells, destroys T-cells

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8
Q

how does HIV lead to death?

A

Death is the direct result of other microbes co-infecting the patient

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9
Q

What is the main cause of enteric diseases?

A

drinking contaminated water or undercooked food (Escherichia coli and rotavirus)

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10
Q

How are enteric diseases treated?

A

with fluids and prevented with sewage treatment

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11
Q

What is a problem in developed countries with enteric diseases?

A

resistance to antibiotics

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12
Q

Who mapped cholera and to where?

A

John Snow mapped cholera to a contaminated well (Considered the
founding event in ID
epidemiology)

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13
Q

Cholera Bed

A

Beds with holes cut in them so people did not have to get up to go to the bathroom cause they would lose about 10L of bodily fluids in a day and could not get up to walk

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14
Q

Antibiotic resistant bacteria restore the potential threat of bacterial infections, for example:

A

VRE, MRSA, multi-drug resistant TB

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15
Q

New viruses that have emerged as threats

A

HIV, West Nile Virus, Ebola

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16
Q

How was HIV first described in clinical settings?

A

described in gay men in LA in 1980

17
Q

The spread of HIV

A

extremally fast and by 1990 there were few AIDS free places on earth

18
Q

Where were the largest populations of HIV?

A

Sub-Saharan Africa and SE Asia

19
Q

West Nile Encephalitis

A

Long known to cause disease in animals
and people in Africa

20
Q

Where was west nile thought to be restricted?

A

tropical environments

21
Q

When was west nile first seen in the US?

A

1999

22
Q

How many cases of west nile per year in US?

A

5000 cases, 500 deaths

23
Q

Containment of west nile?

A

no real chance to contain the virus because its spread by mosquito between birds and humans

24
Q

Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy

A

“Mad Cow Disease”

25
Q

What causes Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy?

A

infectious protein particle, a prion

26
Q

How is Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy spread?

A

spread through cattle population by rendering dead cattle and sheep in feed

27
Q

Where was Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy first seen and when?

A

Contaminated British beef in 1990s

28
Q

How many cases of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy in Britain by 2002?

A

138 cases of vCJD

29
Q

What is MDR TB resistant to?

A

most antibiotics (needs a “cocktail”

30
Q

What is MRSA resistant to?

A

all antibiotics except vancomycin

31
Q

What is VRE resistant to?

A

virtually all antibiotics

32
Q

What is VRSA (VISA) resistant to?

A

potentially resistant to all antibiotics