MMI133 Lecture Notes - Lecture 23: Meningitis, Aseptic Meningitis, Neisseria Meningitidis

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Describe the major route by which cns infections occur. List the most common causes of acute bacterial meningitis and chronic bacterial meningitis. Describe botulism and the mechanisms of pathogenicity. Describe clinical disease caused by polio, mechanism of pathogenicity and prevention of disease by vaccine. Identify the rabies agent and how to reduce transmission. Describe the agent responsible for west nile fever and identify the vector. Recognize how prions can cause irreversible brain damage. Brain and spinal cord, both enclosed by bone. All nerves in body connected to spinal cord. Motor nerves: carry messages from cns to parts of body (central nervous system) Sensory nerves: transmit messages from periphery to the cns (peripheral nervous. Axons: long extensions of nerve cells, transmit impulses (bundles of axons make up nerves) Ganglia: small bodies containing sensory nerve cells located near the spinal column (but outside of it) Motor nerve cells: located in the spinal column.

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