Pathogens and the Host Flashcards
What is clinical infection characterised by?
Inflammation
Pain
Pyrexia (raised body temperature)
Tachycardia (increased heartrate)
Rigors (sudden feeling of cold with shivers)
Increased white cell count
Increased C reactive protein (CRP)
What is pyrexia?
Raised body temperature
What is tachycardia?
Increased heartrate
What are rigors?
Sudden feeling of cold with shivers
What is a pathogen?
An organism that can cause disease
What is a commensal?
An organism which is part of normal flora
What are examples of commensals?
E coli in the gut
Staph aureus in the nose
What is a skin commensal?
Coagulase-negative staphyloccii
When can coagulase-negative staphyloccii be pathogenic?
In the presence of foreign bodies (such as prosthetic heart valves)
What is Koch’s postulates?
The criteria used to identify the agent of a particular disease
What are the principles of Koch’s postulates?
Organism must be found in all cases of the disease
Able to be cultured outside the body for several generations
Should reproduce the disease on inoculation (vaccination)
What do non-sterile sites contain that sterile sites do not?
Commensals
What do we need knowledge of to determine if something is a pathogen?
Normal flora for the site
Organisms pathogenicity
Clinical context
What is pathogenicity?
Ability of an organism to cause disease
What is flora?
Collective bacteria and other microorganisms in an ecosystem
What does an organism need to be to cause an infection?
Infectivity (ability to become established)
Virulence (ability to cause harmful effects once established)
What is infectivity?
Ability to become established
What is virulence?
Ability to cause harmful effects once established
What are things that help infectivity?
Attachment (such as P-fimbriae on E coli)
Acid resistance (such as urease on helicobacter pylori)
What is an example of attachment helping infectivity?
P-fimbriae on E coli
What is an example of acid resistance helping infectivity?
Urease on helicobacter pylori
What is urease?
An enzyme that catalysis urea to ammonia and carbon dioxide
What is virulence supported by?
Invasiveness
Toxin production
Evasion of immune system
What is virulence specific to?
Strains, not species
