MICB 202 Chapter Notes - Chapter 1: Hospital-Acquired Infection, Subclinical Infection, Focal Infection Theory

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11 Aug 2017
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Disease-causing microorganisms constitute only a very small fraction of microbes. Infection: colonization of human body(host) by pathogenic bacteria. Disease: damage to the body that impairs function. Pathogenicity: ability of a bacterium to cause diseases (qualitative) Pathogen: bacterium capable of harming a normal host (defenses not compromised) Opportunistic pathogen: only capable of harming a compromised host (immunodeficiency, prior infection, disease, wound etc. ) Virulence: measure of the pathogenicity of a bacterium (quantitative) Secondary infection: a later infection caused by an opportunistic organism after a primary infection. Clinical infection: host exhibits signs and/or symptoms of disease. Iatrogenic: a result from surgery, diagnostic procedures or medical implants (doctor induced) I(cid:374)vasive(cid:374)ess: the ability of the orga(cid:374)is(cid:373) to i(cid:374)vade i(cid:374)to the host"s body. Local infection: small area of the body (non-invasive organisms) Focal infection: begins in a restricted area, then spreads throughout the body. Systemic (generalized) infection: spread throughout the body. Often disseminated throughout the body via the blood.

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