Basu unit 5 – Flashcards

question
Salmonella Diseases
answer
Salmonella Gastroenteritis (Salonellosis)
Typhoid Fever
question
Slamonella is...?
answer
A gram negative bacterial rod.
question
Slamonellosis (Gastroenteritis)- Transmission
answer
Uncooked poultry (most likely)
Eggs
Cross-contaminated food
question
Salmonella Gastroenteritis (Salmonellosis) - Pathogenesis
answer
Incubation 12-48 hours
Ingestion -> bacteria multiplies in intestinal mucosa
question
Who is Salmonellosis most dangerous to?
answer
Infants and elderly
Self limiting in healthy people
question
Typhoid fever - causal agent
answer
Salmonella typhi (gram negative rod)
question
Typhoid fever - pathogenesis
answer
Incubation 1-3 weeks
Ingestion -> infects intestines -> bacteremia -> abdominal organs
question
Typhoid fever - specialized symptoms
answer
Enlarged liver/spleen, enlarged and tender abdominal cavity.
Can have healthy carriers - survivors carry for life in gall bladder
question
Bacilliary dyssentary (Shigellosis)- causal agent
answer
Gram negative bacterial rod Shigella sonnei
question
Bacilliary dyssentary (Shigellosis) - pathogenesis
answer
Ingestion -> infects intestines
question
Bacilliary dyssentary (Shigellosis) - speciaized symptoms
answer
SEVERE diarrhea (mucus/pus/blood)
Many healthy carriers
question
Bacilliary dyssentary (shigellosis) - who is most susceptible?
answer
Kids 1-4 therefore can be outbreaks in nurseries/daycare
question
Cholera - causative agent
answer
vibrio cholerae - gram negative curved rod
question
Cholera - transmission
answer
infected water or shrimps
question
Cholera - pathogenesis
answer
Unusual enterotoxin causes extreme excretion of liquids from small intestine
question
Cholera - complications
answer
10-20 liters of 'ricewater' stools explelled per day
stools can have tissue debris
leads to dehydration and shock
can cause low BP
question
E. coli Gastro enteritis (traveller's diarrhea)-causal agent
answer
enteroinvasive E. coli
sometimes Shigella, salmonella or campylobacter
question
Travellers diarrhea (gastroenteritis) - transmission
answer
unfamiliar tap water
question
Travellers diarrhea (gastroenteritis) - pathogenesis
answer
ingestion -> intestines
short illness 1-2 days of mild to severe diarrhea
question
Ulcers - two kinds
answer
gastric and duodenal
question
Ulcers - causative agent
answer
Helicobacter pylori bacterial gram negative
question
Ulcers - specialized symptoms
answer
Burning of stomach lining
produce urease
infects mucosa causing ulcerations
can be linked to stomach cancer
question
Bacterioides (anaerobic infections) - causal agent
answer
Bacterioides fragilis - gram negative obligate anaerobe from normal flora (upper respiratory, intestines, vaginal tract)
question
bacterioides 3 types
answer
Intra-abdominal (surgery/trauma)
Pelvic abcess (giving birth/abortion)
Cellulitis (necrosis and gangreen)
question
Diannhea by Clostridium difficile - defining factors
answer
Foul, striking odor
nosocomial diarrhea
so severe may perforate large intestine
question
E. coli food infection
answer
contaminated meat, milk, unpasturised fruit, juice, lettuce, water..
person to person
Causes heloyitic uremic syndrome in children
effects kidneys
question
Campylobacter gastroenteritis
answer
Gram negative spirochetes
poultry, meat, raw milk, water
1-3 days incubation
lasts for a week
self limiting
question
Yersinosis
answer
Yersinia entercolitica
Gram negative bacterial rod
normal flora
cytotroph- survives refridgerator
meat, milk, person to person
sometimes confused with apendicitis
question
Vibrio paramythicus
answer
infected seafood/shellfish
24hrs incubation
burning sensation/cramps
question
Bacillus cereus
answer
gram POSITIVE
raw dry food ( rice, legumes,lentil, soil)
1-2 hr incubation
survive cooking
question
Staphylococcus aureus
answer
food poisoning for 24 hrs
from food handlers (sandwiches salads etc)
question
Botulism
answer
Clostridium botulinum
food/wounds
gram POSITIVE
obligate anaerobe
potent neurotoxin - neuromuscular junction
canned foods
survivors have brain damage
causes double vision, gradual paralysis, respiratory arrest
question
Botulism in babies
answer
floppy baby syndrome
from honey
toxemia
weak sucking/swallowing
question
Clostridium perfringes
answer
gram positive
grows in left out food (thanksgiving)
mild 24-48 hrs
question
Listeriosis
answer
Lysteria monocytogenes
gram positive bacteria
monocytes increase
cytogenic (survive refrigerator)
mainly in immunosuppressed/cancer/pregnant
neonatal listerosis - miscarriage/stillbirth
septacemia, menengitis
60% mortality rate
question
STD syphilis
answer
Treponema pallidum - spirochete
motile, does not stimulate defenses
four stages:
primary - chancre (hard, painless)
secondary - hairloss, malaise, low fever, rash
latent - silent - asymptomatic
tertiary - incurable/terminal delayed hypersensitivity - GUMMAS
defects if infect fetus across placenta (congenital syphilis)
question
Gonnohrea
answer
most common
nisseria gonorrhoeae
males : urethritis/destroy reprodictive
female : many asymptomatic can lead to PID which leads to infertility
can be systemic
question
opthamalia neonatum
answer
gonnorhea eye infection in newborm
question
Nongonnococcal urethritis
answer
chlamydia trachomatis/ ureplasma urealticum
mirrors gonorrhea
question
Genital herpes
answer
Herpes simplex virus type 2 (sometimes type 1 but rare)
painful fluid filles legions - burst/scab over
latent/recurrent at same site
can be fatal/cns damage/blindness
question
Genital warts
answer
human papilloma virus
DNA virus
external or internal
males have dry infection (grey and hard)
irregularities on pap smear
connected to penial and cervical cances
question
HIV/AIDS
answer
retrovirus
body fluid transfer (not airborne or fomites)
can test positive after 6mo
A- lymphodenopathy/ malaise
B- Opportunistic infections
C- Clinical AIDS- tcell below 200 count- reactivation of latent disease
Kaposis sarcoma (spots)
Pneumocystis pneumoniae often cause of death
question
Septecemia
answer
gram neagative, occasionally gram positive
blood poisoning
lymphangitis - streaks from endotoxin
do not use antibiotics
question
Lyme disease
answer
most common tick disease
gram negative spirochetes
Borrelia burgdorferi
deer/mice
often disseminates
1 - bullseye rash
2 - doesnt always occus (myocarditis, muscle pain, neurological symptoms)
3 - late (mo-yrs later) arthritis, chronic
question
Rocky mountain spotted fever
answer
Rickettsia rickettsi - intracellular pathogen
ticks/tick eggs
rash -> heart -> kidneys -> organ failure
20% mortality rate
question
Plague
answer
Black death
zoonosis
killed 25% of population
Yersinia pestis - gram negative rod
Bubonic or Pneumonic
question
Infectious mononeucleosis
answer
Epstein barr virus - latent
1 yr contagious
lymph is 25% above mormal
enlarged spleen/liver
reactivate in immunosupressed
question
Anthrax
answer
Bacillus anthracis
gram Positive
cutaneous - contact w/ wool/leather - woolsorters disease
pulomary - inhalation, high mortality
question
Filovirus
answer
coiled ball
thread virus (single strand)
marbug - germany - green monkeys
Ebola - zaire and sudan - 1976 - 1995
question
Ebola virus
answer
RNA filovirus
clots shut off blood supply
liquifies collagen - causes rips
bleeding from all orifaces
question
Mumps
answer
Viral
paramyxo RNA
infects parotid gland under ear
orchitis/pancratitis/meningitis
question
Viral gastroenteritis
answer
Rota RNA virus
NVD
Rotavirus most responsible for enteritis in children
question
Cytomegalo virus
answer
Huge cells b/c inclusion bodies
herpes virus
latent in tcells/macrophages
severe to immuno supressed and children (pneumonia/blindness)
question
Viral hepatitis - general symptoms
answer
Anorexia
NVD
fever
headache
fatigue
abdominal pain
jaundice

- Virus varies in type and severity
question
Hep A
answer
fecal-oral
Naked RNA
Contagious
No liver disease
question
Hep B
answer
most severe
enveloped DNA
blood
dibilitating
oncogenic
question
Hep C
answer
Enveloped RNA
blood
chronic
decades for symptoms to develop
question
Hep D
answer
Needs Hep B to form envelope
Enveloped RNA
parenteral
relapses
question
Hep E
answer
fecal-oral
Naked RNA
complications in pregnancy - 25% mortality for mother
question
Meningecoccal meningitis
answer
nisseira minigedites
gram negativ diplococcus
nasopharynx
petichial rash
schwartzmann phenomenon (purple spots)
question
Haemophilius meningitis HiB
answer
Gram nevative encapsulated
common in infant
no schwartzmann
deafness/retardation
6% mortality
leading cause of retardation
question
Pneumococcal meningitis
answer
Strep pneumoniae
gram Positive
healthy carriers
no schwartzmann
26% mortality rate
primary infants/newborn, secondary toddlers
question
Leprosy
answer
hansens disease
tropical
likes warm temp
Mycobacterium leprae
acid fast
5-15 yr incubation
intracellular
question
Tuberculoid leprosy
answer
pale nodules, loos of sensation, non contagious
question
Lepromatous leprosy
answer
lepromas (nodules) all over
lion face
progressive
VERY contagious
no CMI develops
question
Viral meningitis
answer
aseptic
echo virus
less severe
self llimiting
question
Polio
answer
Naked RNA pico virus
fecal-oral
14 day incubation
lymph - viremia - CNS
post - 25-35 years after reactivated
question
non paralytic poio
answer
common
stops at lymph
self limiting
mild
question
paralytic polio
answer
anterior horns of spinal cord
destroys motor neurons
question
Bulbar polio
answer
medulla/respiratory center
Iron lung
paralysis
question
Rabies
answer
zoonosis
RNA rhabdo virus
animal bites/saliva
question
Furious rabies
answer
animals
unusual aggresion/behavior
foaming/cant swallow
paralysis
dogs
question
Paralytic (dumb) rabies
answer
cats
lethargic/non responsive
aggressive if provoked
gradual paralysis
question
Human rabies
answer
fatal encephalytis
hydrophobia
need anti globulin immediately
question
Arthropod encephalitis
answer
Epidemic
insects (mosquitos)
Arbovirus
Eastern equine most rare and severe
western, st louis, california
wide range of symptoms
question
West nile Encephalitis
answer
effects crows mostly
RNA flavi virus
Dangerous to elderly (neurological damage)
question
Prions
answer
protien
no nucleic acid
long incubation
damage CNS no fever or inflammation
spongy brain
question
Creutzfeldt - jacob
answer
prion
rare
transplants/injection of growth hormone
odd proteins
get from open wounds
question
Kuru
answer
prion
cannibals in new guinea
brain tissues ingested
question
Mad Cow
answer
CDJ
prion
cows eat sheep parts with scrapies
1st found in england
acquired from beef
1 of

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Salmonella Diseases
answer
Salmonella Gastroenteritis (Salonellosis)
Typhoid Fever
question
Slamonella is...?
answer
A gram negative bacterial rod.
question
Slamonellosis (Gastroenteritis)- Transmission
answer
Uncooked poultry (most likely)
Eggs
Cross-contaminated food
question
Salmonella Gastroenteritis (Salmonellosis) - Pathogenesis
answer
Incubation 12-48 hours
Ingestion -> bacteria multiplies in intestinal mucosa
question
Who is Salmonellosis most dangerous to?
answer
Infants and elderly
Self limiting in healthy people
question
Typhoid fever - causal agent
answer
Salmonella typhi (gram negative rod)
question
Typhoid fever - pathogenesis
answer
Incubation 1-3 weeks
Ingestion -> infects intestines -> bacteremia -> abdominal organs
question
Typhoid fever - specialized symptoms
answer
Enlarged liver/spleen, enlarged and tender abdominal cavity.
Can have healthy carriers - survivors carry for life in gall bladder
question
Bacilliary dyssentary (Shigellosis)- causal agent
answer
Gram negative bacterial rod Shigella sonnei
question
Bacilliary dyssentary (Shigellosis) - pathogenesis
answer
Ingestion -> infects intestines
question
Bacilliary dyssentary (Shigellosis) - speciaized symptoms
answer
SEVERE diarrhea (mucus/pus/blood)
Many healthy carriers
question
Bacilliary dyssentary (shigellosis) - who is most susceptible?
answer
Kids 1-4 therefore can be outbreaks in nurseries/daycare
question
Cholera - causative agent
answer
vibrio cholerae - gram negative curved rod
question
Cholera - transmission
answer
infected water or shrimps
question
Cholera - pathogenesis
answer
Unusual enterotoxin causes extreme excretion of liquids from small intestine
question
Cholera - complications
answer
10-20 liters of 'ricewater' stools explelled per day
stools can have tissue debris
leads to dehydration and shock
can cause low BP
question
E. coli Gastro enteritis (traveller's diarrhea)-causal agent
answer
enteroinvasive E. coli
sometimes Shigella, salmonella or campylobacter
question
Travellers diarrhea (gastroenteritis) - transmission
answer
unfamiliar tap water
question
Travellers diarrhea (gastroenteritis) - pathogenesis
answer
ingestion -> intestines
short illness 1-2 days of mild to severe diarrhea
question
Ulcers - two kinds
answer
gastric and duodenal
question
Ulcers - causative agent
answer
Helicobacter pylori bacterial gram negative
question
Ulcers - specialized symptoms
answer
Burning of stomach lining
produce urease
infects mucosa causing ulcerations
can be linked to stomach cancer
question
Bacterioides (anaerobic infections) - causal agent
answer
Bacterioides fragilis - gram negative obligate anaerobe from normal flora (upper respiratory, intestines, vaginal tract)
question
bacterioides 3 types
answer
Intra-abdominal (surgery/trauma)
Pelvic abcess (giving birth/abortion)
Cellulitis (necrosis and gangreen)
question
Diannhea by Clostridium difficile - defining factors
answer
Foul, striking odor
nosocomial diarrhea
so severe may perforate large intestine
question
E. coli food infection
answer
contaminated meat, milk, unpasturised fruit, juice, lettuce, water..
person to person
Causes heloyitic uremic syndrome in children
effects kidneys
question
Campylobacter gastroenteritis
answer
Gram negative spirochetes
poultry, meat, raw milk, water
1-3 days incubation
lasts for a week
self limiting
question
Yersinosis
answer
Yersinia entercolitica
Gram negative bacterial rod
normal flora
cytotroph- survives refridgerator
meat, milk, person to person
sometimes confused with apendicitis
question
Vibrio paramythicus
answer
infected seafood/shellfish
24hrs incubation
burning sensation/cramps
question
Bacillus cereus
answer
gram POSITIVE
raw dry food ( rice, legumes,lentil, soil)
1-2 hr incubation
survive cooking
question
Staphylococcus aureus
answer
food poisoning for 24 hrs
from food handlers (sandwiches salads etc)
question
Botulism
answer
Clostridium botulinum
food/wounds
gram POSITIVE
obligate anaerobe
potent neurotoxin - neuromuscular junction
canned foods
survivors have brain damage
causes double vision, gradual paralysis, respiratory arrest
question
Botulism in babies
answer
floppy baby syndrome
from honey
toxemia
weak sucking/swallowing
question
Clostridium perfringes
answer
gram positive
grows in left out food (thanksgiving)
mild 24-48 hrs
question
Listeriosis
answer
Lysteria monocytogenes
gram positive bacteria
monocytes increase
cytogenic (survive refrigerator)
mainly in immunosuppressed/cancer/pregnant
neonatal listerosis - miscarriage/stillbirth
septacemia, menengitis
60% mortality rate
question
STD syphilis
answer
Treponema pallidum - spirochete
motile, does not stimulate defenses
four stages:
primary - chancre (hard, painless)
secondary - hairloss, malaise, low fever, rash
latent - silent - asymptomatic
tertiary - incurable/terminal delayed hypersensitivity - GUMMAS
defects if infect fetus across placenta (congenital syphilis)
question
Gonnohrea
answer
most common
nisseria gonorrhoeae
males : urethritis/destroy reprodictive
female : many asymptomatic can lead to PID which leads to infertility
can be systemic
question
opthamalia neonatum
answer
gonnorhea eye infection in newborm
question
Nongonnococcal urethritis
answer
chlamydia trachomatis/ ureplasma urealticum
mirrors gonorrhea
question
Genital herpes
answer
Herpes simplex virus type 2 (sometimes type 1 but rare)
painful fluid filles legions - burst/scab over
latent/recurrent at same site
can be fatal/cns damage/blindness
question
Genital warts
answer
human papilloma virus
DNA virus
external or internal
males have dry infection (grey and hard)
irregularities on pap smear
connected to penial and cervical cances
question
HIV/AIDS
answer
retrovirus
body fluid transfer (not airborne or fomites)
can test positive after 6mo
A- lymphodenopathy/ malaise
B- Opportunistic infections
C- Clinical AIDS- tcell below 200 count- reactivation of latent disease
Kaposis sarcoma (spots)
Pneumocystis pneumoniae often cause of death
question
Septecemia
answer
gram neagative, occasionally gram positive
blood poisoning
lymphangitis - streaks from endotoxin
do not use antibiotics
question
Lyme disease
answer
most common tick disease
gram negative spirochetes
Borrelia burgdorferi
deer/mice
often disseminates
1 - bullseye rash
2 - doesnt always occus (myocarditis, muscle pain, neurological symptoms)
3 - late (mo-yrs later) arthritis, chronic
question
Rocky mountain spotted fever
answer
Rickettsia rickettsi - intracellular pathogen
ticks/tick eggs
rash -> heart -> kidneys -> organ failure
20% mortality rate
question
Plague
answer
Black death
zoonosis
killed 25% of population
Yersinia pestis - gram negative rod
Bubonic or Pneumonic
question
Infectious mononeucleosis
answer
Epstein barr virus - latent
1 yr contagious
lymph is 25% above mormal
enlarged spleen/liver
reactivate in immunosupressed
question
Anthrax
answer
Bacillus anthracis
gram Positive
cutaneous - contact w/ wool/leather - woolsorters disease
pulomary - inhalation, high mortality
question
Filovirus
answer
coiled ball
thread virus (single strand)
marbug - germany - green monkeys
Ebola - zaire and sudan - 1976 - 1995
question
Ebola virus
answer
RNA filovirus
clots shut off blood supply
liquifies collagen - causes rips
bleeding from all orifaces
question
Mumps
answer
Viral
paramyxo RNA
infects parotid gland under ear
orchitis/pancratitis/meningitis
question
Viral gastroenteritis
answer
Rota RNA virus
NVD
Rotavirus most responsible for enteritis in children
question
Cytomegalo virus
answer
Huge cells b/c inclusion bodies
herpes virus
latent in tcells/macrophages
severe to immuno supressed and children (pneumonia/blindness)
question
Viral hepatitis - general symptoms
answer
Anorexia
NVD
fever
headache
fatigue
abdominal pain
jaundice

- Virus varies in type and severity
question
Hep A
answer
fecal-oral
Naked RNA
Contagious
No liver disease
question
Hep B
answer
most severe
enveloped DNA
blood
dibilitating
oncogenic
question
Hep C
answer
Enveloped RNA
blood
chronic
decades for symptoms to develop
question
Hep D
answer
Needs Hep B to form envelope
Enveloped RNA
parenteral
relapses
question
Hep E
answer
fecal-oral
Naked RNA
complications in pregnancy - 25% mortality for mother
question
Meningecoccal meningitis
answer
nisseira minigedites
gram negativ diplococcus
nasopharynx
petichial rash
schwartzmann phenomenon (purple spots)
question
Haemophilius meningitis HiB
answer
Gram nevative encapsulated
common in infant
no schwartzmann
deafness/retardation
6% mortality
leading cause of retardation
question
Pneumococcal meningitis
answer
Strep pneumoniae
gram Positive
healthy carriers
no schwartzmann
26% mortality rate
primary infants/newborn, secondary toddlers
question
Leprosy
answer
hansens disease
tropical
likes warm temp
Mycobacterium leprae
acid fast
5-15 yr incubation
intracellular
question
Tuberculoid leprosy
answer
pale nodules, loos of sensation, non contagious
question
Lepromatous leprosy
answer
lepromas (nodules) all over
lion face
progressive
VERY contagious
no CMI develops
question
Viral meningitis
answer
aseptic
echo virus
less severe
self llimiting
question
Polio
answer
Naked RNA pico virus
fecal-oral
14 day incubation
lymph - viremia - CNS
post - 25-35 years after reactivated
question
non paralytic poio
answer
common
stops at lymph
self limiting
mild
question
paralytic polio
answer
anterior horns of spinal cord
destroys motor neurons
question
Bulbar polio
answer
medulla/respiratory center
Iron lung
paralysis
question
Rabies
answer
zoonosis
RNA rhabdo virus
animal bites/saliva
question
Furious rabies
answer
animals
unusual aggresion/behavior
foaming/cant swallow
paralysis
dogs
question
Paralytic (dumb) rabies
answer
cats
lethargic/non responsive
aggressive if provoked
gradual paralysis
question
Human rabies
answer
fatal encephalytis
hydrophobia
need anti globulin immediately
question
Arthropod encephalitis
answer
Epidemic
insects (mosquitos)
Arbovirus
Eastern equine most rare and severe
western, st louis, california
wide range of symptoms
question
West nile Encephalitis
answer
effects crows mostly
RNA flavi virus
Dangerous to elderly (neurological damage)
question
Prions
answer
protien
no nucleic acid
long incubation
damage CNS no fever or inflammation
spongy brain
question
Creutzfeldt - jacob
answer
prion
rare
transplants/injection of growth hormone
odd proteins
get from open wounds
question
Kuru
answer
prion
cannibals in new guinea
brain tissues ingested
question
Mad Cow
answer
CDJ
prion
cows eat sheep parts with scrapies
1st found in england
acquired from beef
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