BIOL 2051 Lecture Notes - Lecture 26: Corynebacterium Diphtheriae, Upper Respiratory Tract Infection, Orthomyxoviridae

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10 Feb 2017
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Hospitals- nosocomial infections: resistant to all drugs except vancomycin. Chickenpox: caused by varicella-zoster virus (vzv), a herpesvirus, vzv can lay dormant in nerve cells for long periods of time; shingles is caused by the migration of vzv to the skin; painful blisters. Measles/rubeola: caused by a paramyxovirus, symptoms- fever, cough, rash. Rubella/german measles: caused by a togavirus, symptoms- similar to measles but milder. Most respiratory pathogens are transferred from person to person via respiratory aerosols- coughing, sneezing, talking, breathing. Transmission usually occurs over short distances because microbes survive poorly in air. Pathogens that can survive dry conditions such as many gram-positive & mycobacteria are easier to transmit by air. Host immune response: macrophage ingestion of bacteria results in a delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction; aggregates of macrophages called tubercles. The bacteria survive and grow within the macrophages. Reinfection from outside sources or reactivation of dormant bacteria. Aging, malnutrition, overcrowding, stress can reduce effective immunity and allow reactivation of dormant bacteria.

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