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Pathogens

Pathogens. Mr. Mah Living Environment Lecture 11. Warm-Up. Take 3 minutes to write down as many diseases/illnesses you can think of! Now, put a dot beside the ones you think can be spread or caught. Underline the ones you do not think can be spread or caught.

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Pathogens

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  1. Pathogens Mr. Mah Living Environment Lecture 11

  2. Warm-Up • Take 3 minutes to write down as many diseases/illnesses you can think of! • Now, put a dot beside the ones you think can be spread or caught. Underline the ones you do not think can be spread or caught.

  3. SWBAT identify various types of pathogens and their effect on an organism’s homeostasis.

  4. What is a Disease? • A disease is any medical condition or physical abnormality that does not allow the body to function normally and throws off homeostasis

  5. Communicable vs. Non-Communicable • Diseases can be grouped into two major categories: the kind that can be spread from one person or object to another person or object and the kind that cannot be spread • Communicable Disease - Any disease that is infectious (can be spread) • Non-Communicable Disease - Any disease that is not infectious and is instead either genetic or caused by lifestylefactors (i.e smoking)

  6. Human Infectious Disease Transmission Disease Cause Affected Organ System Droplet Smallpox Virus Skin Chicken pox Droplet Virus Skin Rabies Animal bite Virus Nervous system Poliomyelitis Virus Nervous system Virus Contaminated water Direct contact Colds Viruses Respiratory system Influenza Direct contact Viruses Respiratory system HIV/AIDS Virus Immune system Exchange of body fluids Hepatitis B Virus Liver Exchange of body fluids Tetanus Bacteria Nervous system Puncture wound Food poisoning Bacteria Digestive system Contaminated food/water Strep throat Bacteria Respiratory system Droplet Droplet Diptheria Bacteria Respiratory system Droplet Tuberculosis Bacteria Respiratory system Bacteria Nervous system Droplet Spinal meningitis

  7. Communicable Diseases • The reason communicable diseases are infectious is because they are caused by pathogens that can travel from one person or object to another • Communicable diseases can be spread through:- viruses- parasites- bacteria- fungi

  8. Examples of Communicable Diseases • Common cold • Flu • All STDs (AIDS, syphilis, herpes) • Mono • Chicken pox • Malaria • Ringworm • Food poisoning

  9. The Spread of Infectious Diseases • For a disease to continue and spread, there must be a continual source of the disease organisms. • This source can be either a living organism or an inanimate object on which the pathogen can survive.

  10. Reservoirs of pathogens • The body can be a reservoir of disease-causing organisms. • People may transmit pathogens directly or indirectly to other people.

  11. Reservoirs of pathogens • Sometimes, people can harbor pathogens without exhibiting any signs of the illness and unknowingly transmit the pathogens to others. • These people are called carriers and are a significant reservoir of infectious diseases.

  12. Transmission of disease • Pathogens can be transmitted to a host from reservoirs in four main ways: • 1. Direct contact • 2. By an object, • 3. Through the air, • 4. By an intermediateorganism called a vector. • The common cold, influenza, and STDs are spread by direct contact.

  13. Transmission of disease • Bacteria and other microorganisms can be present on nonliving objects such as money, toys, or towels. • Transmission occurs when people unknowingly handle contaminated objects.

  14. Transmission of disease • Airborne transmission of a disease can occur when a person coughs or sneezes, spreading pathogens contained in droplets of mucus into the air.

  15. Transmission of disease • Diseases transmitted by vectors are most commonly spread by insects. • Diseases such as malaria and the WestNilevirus are transmitted by mosquitoes.

  16. Transmission of disease • Lyme disease and Rocky Mountainspottedfever are diseases that are transmitted by ticks.

  17. Transmission of disease • Flies also are significant vectors of disease. • They transmit pathogens when they land on infected materials, such as animal wastes, and then land on fresh food that is eaten by humans.

  18. What causes the symptoms of a disease? • When a pathogen invades your body, it encounters your immune system. • If the pathogen overcomes the defenses of your immune system, it can metabolize and multiply, causing damage to the tissues it has invaded, and even killing host cells.

  19. Damage to the host by viruses and bacteria • Most of the damage done to host cells by bacteria is inflicted by toxins. • Toxins are poisonous substances that are sometimes produced by microorganisms.

  20. Damage to the host by viruses and bacteria • These poisons are transported by the blood and can inhibit protein synthesis in the host cell, destroy blood cells and blood vessels, produce fever, or cause spasms by disrupting the nervous system.

  21. Treating Diseases • An antibiotic is a substance produced by a microorganism that, in small amounts, will kill or inhibit the growth and reproduction of other microorganisms, especially bacteria. • Although antibiotics can be used to cure some bacterial infections, antibiotics do not have an effect on viruses.

  22. Treating Diseases • With the continued use of antibiotics, bacteria can become resistant to the drugs. • That means the drugs become ineffective. • Penicillin, an antibiotic produced by a fungus, was used for the first time in the 1940s and is still one of the most effective antibiotics known.

  23. Treating Diseases • The use of antibiotics is only one way to fight infections. • Your body also has its own built-in defense system—the immune system—that works to keep you healthy.

  24. Non-Communicable Diseases • Non-communicable diseases are NOT caused by pathogens • Non-communicable diseases can be genetic (meaning that you carry a gene that makes your body not function the way it is supposed to) • Non-communicable diseases can also be caused by bad habits and external factors (for example, smoking can cause you to develop lung cancer)

  25. Examples of Non-Communicable Diseases • Sickle cell anemia • Diabetes • Cancer • Asthma • Heart problems • Allergies

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