BM1000 Lecture Notes - Lecture 25: Mary Mallon, Gram-Negative Bacteria, Gram-Positive Bacteria

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16 Jul 2018
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The difference between gram positive and gram negative bacteria. Appearance and function of bacterial structures and products. Our body surfaces are colonised with 108 bacteria/cm2. Internally, many of our mucous membranes are colonised with bacteria. Pathogens = microbes frequently associated with disease production. Pathogenesis is the mechanism a microbe uses to cause the disease state. Infection refers to the replication of a pathogen in or on its host. Call surface or secreted factors which give them a survival advantage. Some of these result in damage (disease/pathology) to the host. The more virulence factors and organism has, the more likely it is to cause disease. Virulence = measure the severity of disease a pathogen can induce. Primary pathogens tend to produce disease readily in healthy hosts. Opportunistic pathogens generally only cause disease when displaced to an unusual site or when the host has a weakened immune system.

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