Principles of Pathogenesis Flashcards

1
Q

where in the body are there high and very high numbers of microbes

A

high - genitals and armpit, small intestine

very high - large intestine and mouth

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2
Q

where in the body are there medium numbers of microbes

A

scalp and stomach

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3
Q

where in the body are low numbers of microbes

A

eyes, shoulder, and forearm?

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4
Q

advantages of having a normal microbial population

A
  • they occupy a location blocking microorganisms from coming up so colonization resistance
  • production of factors the inhibit or block the growth of other microorganisms
  • competitive use of available resources
  • low level stimulating the immune system
  • produce useful compounds like Vit K and biotin
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5
Q

microbiome finding in psoriasis

A

increased ratio of firmicutes to actinobacteria

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6
Q

microbiome finding in obesity

A

Reduced ratio of Bacteroidetes to Firmicutes

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7
Q

microbiome finding in childhood onset of asthma

A

Absence of gastric H. pylori (esp. cytotoxin-associated gene A genotype

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8
Q

microbiome finding in inflammatory bowel disease

A

Larger populations of Enterobacteriaceae

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9
Q

areas in the body that are normally sterile

A

heart, blood, brain, liver

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10
Q

what are potential outcomes of host pathogen interaction

A

inapparent/subclinical
immune clearance
commensalistic relationship (not harming or one is benefiting)
damage

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11
Q

symptoms of damage due to host pathogen interaction

A

host mediated: immunopathogenesis

microbially mediated: toxins, enzymes, physical growth

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12
Q

what are some non specific defenses by the body

A

Eyes
• Washing of tears and Lysozyme
Genitourinary tract
• Washing of urine, Acidity of urine, Lysozyme and (Vaginal lactic acid)
Skin
• Physical barrier and Antimicrobial secretions
Respiratory tract
• Mucus, Ciliated epithelium, and Alveolar macrophages
Digestive tract
• Stomach acidity, Normal flora, and Bile

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13
Q

when we have a microbiallly mediated damage – where is it coming from?

A
cytolytic effect of replication
degradative enzymes
toxic structures
physical growth through tissues
bacterial toxins: damage host cell membrane, inhibit cellular functions
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14
Q

what is the infectious disease process

A

exposure and entry
adhesion and colonization
invasion and multiplication
spread and dissemination

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15
Q

answer for opportunistic and true pathogens: require pre existing host compromise, can infect uncompromised host, exposures are due to accidental exposure

A

opportunistic: Always, No, Usually
true: No, Yes, Sometimes

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16
Q

can true pathogens be opportunistic

A

yes

17
Q

what population is more susceptible to infection especially really severe infection

A

very young and very old

18
Q

what is the difference between signs and symptoms

A

signs - one can directly see and measure

symptoms: what the pt describes that they are feeling

19
Q

what are the stage of an infectious disease

A

incubation period, acute infection, chronic infection

20
Q

what is incubation period

A

period of time from acquisition –> signs and symptoms

21
Q

what is incubation period dependent on

A

microbial and host factors

22
Q

just know that correlation between changes in microbiome and disease does not mean causation

A

OK