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Chain of Infection

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Chain of Infection Dr. Mohamed El Bashaar Dr.M.ElBashaar Causative Agent Mode of Transmission Susceptible Host Reservoir Portal of Entry Portal of Exit Dr.M.ElBashaar ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chain of Infection


1
Chain of Infection
  • Dr. Mohamed El Bashaar

2
Causative Agent
Susceptible Host
Reservoir
Portal of Exit
Portal of Entry
Mode of Transmission
3
CAUSATIVE AGENTS
  • A biologic agent/s capable of causing infectious
    diseases.
  • Bacteria,Parasites, Fungi Viruses

4
Reservoir
  • Place in which an infectious agent can survive
    but may or may not multiply
  • Salmonella in milk survives and multiplies
  • Hepatitis B virus on surface of hemodialysis
    machine survives but does not multiply.

5
Two Major Types of Human Reservoir
  • Cases(Patients)
  • Acute clinical
  • Subclinical
  • Carrier (HBV,HIV)

6
Portal of Exit Associated w/ Human Reservoirs
  • Respiratory Tract
  • Genitourinary Tract
  • Gastrointestinal Tract
  • Skin/Mucous Membrane
  • Transplacental (mother to fetus)
  • Blood

7
Modes of Transmission
  • The mechanism for transfer of an infectious agent
    from a reservoir to a susceptible host.

8
Means of TransmissionFive Main Routes
  • Droplet
  • Airborne
  • Common Vehicle (Food, blood)
  • Vector-borne
  • Contact
  • Direct Contact
  • Indirect Contact (Objects)

9
Portal of Entry
  • The path by which an infectious agent enters the
    susceptible host
  • Respiratory tract
  • Genitourinary tract
  • Gastrointestinal tract
  • Skin/mucous membrane
  • Transplacental (fetus from mother)
  • Parenteral (percutaneous, via blood)

10
Susceptible Host
  • A person usually lacking effective resistance to
    a particular pathogenic agent.

11
Sources and modes of transmission of infection
  • Person-to-Person Spread
  • Skin-to-skin contact, clothes, (folliculitis with
    Staphylococci or MRSA ,viral as HSV1)
  • Droplets during coughing, sneezing (common cold,
    flu, swine flu, pneumonia, bacterial meningitis),
    or kissing (infectious mononucleosis, cold sores)
  • Stool-to-mouth (fecal-oral) spread, usually via
    dirty hands or utensils (hepatitis A, Giardia,
    pinworms(oxyuris), cholera, poliomyelitis)

12
  • Sexually transmittedĀ (gonorrhea, Chlamydia,
    genital HSV2, genital warts (human papillomavirus
    HPV), AIDS syphilis)
  • Blood-to-blood contact by
  • contaminated needles, usually by drug addicts or
    health workers (hepatitis B, C, AIDS)
  • blood transfusion (hepatitis B,C, AIDS, viral
    hemorrhagic fevers)
  • Vectors mosquitoes (Malaria, Dengue fever)

13
  • Spread from mother to fetusĀ during pregnancy
    (hepatitis B, C, HIV, HSV-1, HSV-2, rubella,
    toxoplasma, varicella, syphilis, bird flu), or
    delivery (Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria
    gonorrheae, group B StreptococciS.agalactiae)
  • An autoinfection the spread of an infection
    from one body part to another, usually by hands
    or clothes (folliculitis, impetigo).

14
  • 2. Waterborne Infections
  • By drinking contaminated water, one can contract,
    cholera, dysentery, typhoid fever, amebiasis
    cryptosporidium . Tap water in hospitals may
    contain Legionella.
  • By swimming in contaminated swimming or spa
    pools, or lakes, intestinal parasite
    Cryptosporidium, eye and middle ear infections.
    Certain parasites may enter through the
    skin(schistosoma).
  • Water in public showers may hold Legionella
  • Flood water may contain various pathogenic
    microbes

15
  • 3. Airborne Infections
  • Industrial cooling or hot water systems, air
    condition can be a source of M. tuberculosis or
    Legionella
  • 4. Soil
  • During walking barefoot, Clostridium tetani, or
    intestinal parasites, like Strongyloides
    stercoralis or hookworms(Ancylostoma) can be
    contacted.
  • Eating with soil-contaminated hands can also
    result in infection by parasites.

16
  • 5. Food-Borne Infections
  • Food poisoning is an infection of the
    gastrointestinal tract caused by microbes from
    contaminated food bacteria like Salmonella or
    E.coli, toxins from Staphylococcus aureus or
    Clostridium botulinum or viruses like
    Enterovirus.
  • .

17
  • 6. Nosocomial Infections Health-care acquired
    infections(HAI)
  • Usually caused by bacteria that are resistant to
    antibiotics (multi-drug resistant strains).
  • Urinary tract infections from urinary catheters
    (CA-UTI) .
  • Surgical-site infections (SSI).
  • Catheter related Blood stream infections(CR-BSI).
  • Ventilator associated pneumonia(VAP)
  • Fungal infections, in patients with low immunity.
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