Microbial Infections Flashcards

1
Q

What are viruses?

A
  • Not cells in their own right
  • Obligate parasites
  • Contain RNA or DNA as genetic material
  • Replicate using host-cell nuclear synthetic machinery
  • Show host specificity
  • But insect almost all other life forms, inducing bacteria
  • Divide by budding out of hot cell, or cytolysis
  • Various routes of infection
  • Faceal-oral, airborne, insect vectors, blood borne
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2
Q

Describe bacteria

A
  • have no internal membranes: photosynthetic bacteria are an exception, eukaryotes have internal membranes that define organelles including nucleus, ER, mitochondria
  • have a single copy of a chromosome (haploid): eukaryotes can be haploid or diploid
  • cytoskeleton is poorly defined.
  • eukaryotic cells have well developed cytoskeleton
  • cell wall contains peptidoglycan
  • determines shape (rod, coccus, spirochaete)
  • basis of Gram stain
  • divide by binary fission
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3
Q

What is shigella?

A

an invasive pathogen
Shigella
species: infectious dose 10-100 bacteria, faecal oral transmission

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4
Q

What is Neisseria Meningistis?

A

Neisseria Meningitis: commensal to pathogen

  • Community acquired, multiple serogroups
  • Rapid progression
  • Septic shock
  • Severe inflammatory response
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5
Q

What is hospital acquired infection?

A
  • Clostridium difficile
  • Methicillin Resistant
  • Staphylococcus aureus
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6
Q

Describe TB

A

•New drugs to combat anti-microbial resistance and shorten treatment
•Better vaccines for adult population in high burden countries
•Better tools for early diagnosis
a) Conventional chest X-ray, with active pulmonary TB cavity right upper lobe (arrow)
b) High-resolution PET-CT scan using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) of thoracic cavity of person with bilateral TB. Orange depicts FDG uptake

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7
Q

Describe mycobacterium leprae

A
Myobacterium leprae - leprosy 
•Chronic infection of the skin & nerves
•Transmitted by nasal discharges
•Low infectivity (cf. M. tuberculosis)
•Incubation period about 5 years
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8
Q

Describe Fungi

A
  • Eukaryotic
  • cause cutaneous, mucosal and/or systemic mycoses
  • occur as yeasts, filaments or both
  • yeasts bud or divide; filaments (hyphae) which have cross walls or septa
  • Candida albicans
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9
Q

Describe protozoa

A

-Unicellular eukaryotic organisms
-include intestinal, blood and tissue parasites
-replicate in the host by binary fission or by formation of trophozoites inside a cell
asexual reproduction
-many have a complicated life cycle involving two hosts
-Infection is acquired by ingestion or through a vector
eg insect or invertebrate vector
-Malaria and Leishmaniasis

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10
Q

Describe plasmodium species

A

Malaria:

  • infection is acquired via a mosquito vector
  • blood and tissue parasites
  • formation of trophozoites inside a cell
  • Sickle-cell and β-thalassaemia
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11
Q

What is leishmania species?

A

Leishmaniasis:

  • infection is acquired via a sandfly vector
  • blood and tissue parasites
  • formation of trophozoites inside a cell
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12
Q

What is helminths?

A
  • Metazoa with eukaryotic cells
  • Multi-cellular; visible to the naked eye
  • Life cycles outside the human host
  • Roundworms e.g. Ascaris
  • Flatworms (flukes)
  • Tapeworms
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