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Microbe-Human Interactions: Infection and Disease

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Contact-Infection-Disease: ... urinary tract, reproductive tract, and upper respiratory tract The Body as a Habitat Anatomical sites lying within the body cavity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Microbe-Human Interactions: Infection and Disease


1
Chapter 13
  • Microbe-Human Interactions Infection and
    Disease

2
Contact-Infection-Disease The Host-Parasite
Relationship
  • The human body is constantly in contact
    (contaminated) with microbes
  • Some are pathogens that may cause an infection by
    circumventing the host defense system, entering
    normally sterile tissues, and multiplying there
  • When infections lead to a disruption in tissues,
    infectious disease results
  • The outcome is highly variable, but most contacts
    do not result in infection, and most infections
    do not lead to disease

3
Associations between microbes and humans
4
The Body as a Habitat
  • The resident flora or microflora is a huge and
    rich mixed population of microorganisms residing
    on body surfaces exposed to the environment,
    including the skin, mucous membranes, parts of
    the gastrointestinal tract, urinary tract,
    reproductive tract, and upper respiratory tract

5
The Body as a Habitat
  • Anatomical sites lying within the body cavity
    (organs) and fluids (blood, urine) in those sites
    do not harbor flora
  • Colonization begins just prior to birth and
    continues over an individuals life variations
    occur in response to individual differences in
    age, diet, hygiene, and health

6
Normal Flora
  • Bacteria may maintain a balance in the normal
    conditions
  • Studies with axenic animals (free of any normal
    flora) show that flora contribute to the
    development of the immune and gastrointestinal
    systems and also to some diseases (dental caries)
  • Normal flora are sometimes agents of infection

7
Landscape of the skin
  • Microbes live only in upper dead layers of
    epidermis glands, and follicles dermis and
    layers below are sterile

8
Distribution of flora in the gastrointestinal
tract
  • Oral cavity colonize the epidermal layer of
    cheeks, gingiva, pharynx surface of teeth found
    in saliva in huge numbers
  • Large intestine and rectum have huge numbers of
    flora

9
Colonized regions of the respiratory tract
  • The moist mucous blanket of the nasopharynx has a
    well-entrenched flora.
  • Lower regions of bronchi, bronchioles, and lungs
    are free of resident microbes.

10
Flora of the reproductive tract
  • In females, the external genitalia, vaginal, and
    cervical surfaces have flora
  • In females, the first portion of the urethral
    mucosa has flora.
  • In males, the entire reproductive and urinary
    tract is sterile, except for a short portion of
    the anterior urethra

11
Factors Affecting the Course of Infection and
Disease
12
Pathogenicity and Virulence
  • Pathogenicity is the property of microorganisms
    to cause infection and disease
  • Virulence is the precise factors used by the
    microbe to invade and damage host tissues it
    helps define the degree of pathogenicity
  • Pathogenicity varies with a microbes ability to
    invade or harm host tissues and with the
    condition of host defenses
  • A true pathogen produces virulence factors that
    allow it to readily evade host defenses and to
    harm host tissues
  • True pathogens can infect normal, healthy hosts
    with intact defenses
  • An opportunistic pathogen is not highly virulent
    but can cause disease in persons whose host
    defenses are compromised by predisposing
    conditions such as age, genetic defects, medical
    procedures, and underlying organic disease

13
Mechanisms of Infection and Disease
  • The portal of entry is the route by which
    microbes enter the tissues, primarily via skin,
    alimentary tract, respiratory tract (pneumonia),
    urogenital tract (sexually transmitted diseases),
    or placenta

14
Transplacental infection of the fetus
  • Microbes penetrate the maternal blood vessels and
    enter the blood pool of the placenta.
  • They then invade the fetal circulation by way of
    the umbilical vein

15
Mechanisms of Infection and Disease
  • Pathogens that come from outside the body are
    exogenous those that originate from normal flora
    are endogenous
  • The size of the infectious dose is of great
    importance

16
Mechanisms of Infection and Disease
  • In the process of adhesion, a microbe attaches to
    the host cell by means of fimbriae, flagella,
    capsules, or receptors that position it for
    invasion

17
Virulence Factors
  • Exoenzymes digest epithelial tissues, disrupt
    tissues, and permit invasion

18
Virulence Factors
  • Toxigenicity is a microbes capacity to produce
    toxins at site of multiplication which affect
    cellular targets
  • Toxinoses are diseases caused by toxins that
    damage structure or function of host cells
  • Toxemia refers to toxins absorbed into the blood
  • Intoxication means ingestion of toxins

19
Virulence Factors
  • An exotoxin is a protein secreted by living
    bacteria with powerful effects on a specific
    organ
  • Examples are hemolysins and tetanus and
    diphtheria toxins
  • An endotoxin is the lipopolysaccharide portion of
    a gram-negative cell wall released when a
    bacterial cell dies causes generalized symptoms
    such as fever

20
Virulence Factors
  • Antiphagocytic factors include leukocidins (white
    blood cell poisons) and capsules

21
Effects on Target Organ/Spread of Infection
  • Patterns of Infection Stages in
    Infection/Disease
  • Incubation period, the period from contact with
    infectious agent until appearance of first
    symptoms
  • Prodromium, a short period of initial, vague
    symptoms
  • Period of invasion, a variable period during
    which microbe multiplies in high numbers and
    causes severest symptoms
  • Convalescent period, a period of recovery, with
    decline of symptoms

22
Types of Infectious/Diseases
  • Localized infection, microbe remains in isolated
    site
  • Systemic infection, microbe is spread through the
    tissues by circulation
  • Focal infection, microbe spreads from local site
    to entire body (systemic)
  • Mixed infection, several microbes cause one type
    of infection simultaneously
  • Primary infection, the initial infection in a
    series
  • Secondary infection, a second infection that
    complicates a primary infection
  • Septicemia and bacteremia refer to microbes in
    the blood
  • Acute infection appears suddenly, has a short
    course, and is relatively severe
  • Chronic infection persists over a long period of
    time
  • Subacute infection has a pattern between acute
    and chronic

23
Types of Infectious/Diseases
24
Signs and Symptoms Manifestations of disease,
indicators of pathogenic effects on target organs
  • A sign is objective, measurable evidence noted by
    an observer
  • Examples include septicemia, change in number of
    white blood cells skin lesions inflammation
    necrosis, lysis or death of tissues
  • A symptom is a subjective effect of disease as
    sensed by patient
  • Examples are pain, fatigue, and nausea
  • A syndrome is a disease that manifests as a
    predictable complex of symptoms infections that
    do not show symptoms are called asymptomatic,
    subclinical, or inapparent

25
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26
Major portals of exit of infectious diseases
  • Through the portal of exit, microbe is released
    with bodily secretions and discharges to have
    access to new host portals include respiratory
    droplets from sneezing, coughing, saliva, skin,
    feces, urogenital tract (urine, mucus, semen) and
    blood
  • A microbe may become dormant (latent) and cause
    recurrent infections
  • Damaging effects that remain in organs and
    tissues after infection are sequelae

27
Epidemiology
  • Epidemiology is a science that determines the
    factors influencing causation, frequency, and
    distribution of disease in a community
  • Epidemiologists are involved in surveillance of
    reportable diseases in populations and consider
    measures to protect the public health
  • They are concerned with disease statistics such
    as prevalence (the total number of cases),
    incidence (the number of new cases), morbidity
    (general health of the population), and mortality
    (death)

28
Graphical representation of epidemiological data
29
Frequency of Disease
  • Endemic, a disease constantly present in a
    certain geographic area
  • Sporadic, a disease that occurs occasionally with
    no predictable patter
  • Epidemic, sudden outbreak of disease in which
    numbers increase beyond expected trends
  • Pandemic, worldwide epidemic

30
Origin of Pathogens
  • The reservoir is a place where the pathogen
    ultimately originates (its habitat)
  • Source of infection refers to the immediate
    origin of an infectious agent
  • Carrier is an individual that inconspicuously
    shelters a pathogen and spreads it to others

31
Carriers in transmission of infectious agents
  • Asymptomatic carrier is infected without symptoms
  • Incubation carriers carry early in disease
  • Convalescent carriers carry in last phases of
    recovery
  • Chronic carriers carry for long periods after
    recovery
  • Passive carriers are uninfected but convey
    infectious agents from infected persons to
    uninfected ones by hand and instrument contact

32
Vectors/Zoonoses
  • A vector is an animal that transmits pathogens
  • A biological vector is an alternate animal host
    (mosquito, flea) that assists in completion of
    life cycle of microbe
  • A mechanical vector is an animal that does not
    host microbial life cycle, but is a short-term
    transmitter (housefly)
  • A zoonosis is an infection for which animals are
    the natural reservoir and host that can be
    transmitted to humans

33
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34
Acquisition of Infection
  • Communicable infectious disease occurs when
    pathogen is transmitted from host to host
    directly or indirectly contagious diseases are
    readily transmissible through direct contact

35
Acquisition of Infection
  • Non-communicable diseases are not spread from
    host to host acquired from ones normal flora
    (pneumonia) or from a nonliving environmental
    reservoir (tetanus)

36
Acquisition of Infection
  • Direct transmission
  • Infectious agent is spread through direct contact
    of portal of exit with portal of entry (STDs,
    herpes simplex)
  • Indirect transmission
  • A material (vehicle) contaminated with pathogens
    serves as intermediate source of infections
  • A fomite is an inanimate object contaminated with
    pathogens (public facilities, personal items)
  • Food serves as a vehicle
  • Droplet nuclei are airborne dried particles
    containing infectious agents, formed by sneezing
    and coughing

37
Acquisition of Infection
  • Nosocomial infections are infectious diseases
    that originate in the hospital or clinical
    setting
  • They commonly occur among surgical and
    chronically ill patients
  • Hospitals monitor various asepsis procedures to
    help reduce the number of infections
  • Isolation of patients and other universal
    precaution are necessary controls

38
Kochs Postulates
  • Kochs postulates defines a series of criteria
    that must be followed to determine the etiologic
    (causative) agent of disease
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