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How does the body fight off a virus?
How does the body fight off a virus?

... How does the body fight off a virus? Viruses are infectious micro-organisms that require a living host to survive and multiply. When one enters your body, it invades and takes over cells, redirecting them to produce more of the virus. How do our bodies defend us from viruses? When our bodies come un ...
Smallpox Overheads
Smallpox Overheads

... VARIOLA major IS THE MORE VIRULENT FORM WITH A TYPICAL MORTALITY OF 20 to 40%. VARIOLA minor KILLS ABOUT 1% OF VICTIMS. ...
Paracytology and virology 2nd stage Virus
Paracytology and virology 2nd stage Virus

... 1. Viruses are obligate intracellular molecular parasites, which are very small and infectious. 2. The virus genome is composed either of DNA or RNA. 3. The virus genome directs the synthesis of virion components within an appropriate host cell. 4. Progeny virus particles are produced by the assembl ...
Bacteria/Virus Bookwork
Bacteria/Virus Bookwork

... 2. Define antibiotic2. What do over-the-counter medications do to help? 3. Define antibiotic resistance- ...
VIRUSES
VIRUSES

... – Not by mitosis or meiosis – Only when associated with another cell  Obligate Intracellular Parasites – microorganisms that can only reproduce if they have entered another organism's cell ...
Insect-borne Disease - Physicians for Social Responsibility
Insect-borne Disease - Physicians for Social Responsibility

... West Nile Virus • Between 1999 and 2012, about 37,000 cases of West Nile Virus were reported in the U.S., causing approximately 1,500 deaths annually. • There are no medications to treat or vaccines to prevent WNV infections • Approximately 80% of people who contract West Nile Virus do not show any ...
Infectious Diseases
Infectious Diseases

... • Some cases can be traced from people who share needles, blood transfusions or organ transplants • Usually causes chronic infections and if not treated may cause cirrhosis of the liver, liver cancer, or liver ...
Name: Date: ______ Period: _____ Section 19–2 Viruses What Is a
Name: Date: ______ Period: _____ Section 19–2 Viruses What Is a

... 7. A chemical solution that kills pathogenic bacteria is called a(an) _____. 8. Why will food stored at low temperatures keep longer? 9. How can food be preserved through canning? 10. What everyday chemicals can be used to inhibit the growth of bacteria in food? Viral Disease in Humans (pages 488–48 ...
Bacteria and Viruses - Crestwood Local Schools
Bacteria and Viruses - Crestwood Local Schools

... Lysogenic Cycle: viral DNA enters host, viral genes are replicated indefinitely. ...
J - Denton ISD
J - Denton ISD

... virus that causes SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) can be transmitted when an infected person coughs or sneezes. This virus is transmitted in a manner most similar to the transmission of — F smallpox G AIDS H West Nile virus J influenza ...
Pathogens and The Immune System
Pathogens and The Immune System

... A host cell in the lysogenic phase can suddenly convert to the lytic stage…this happens with HIV…when it does, HIV becomes AIDS. ...
MICR 201 Microbiology for Health Related Sciences
MICR 201 Microbiology for Health Related Sciences

... Chills, fever, headache, muscle aches (no intestinal symptoms) 1% mortality due to secondary bacterial infections Vaccine for high-risk individuals ...
MICR 201 Microbiology for Health Related Sciences
MICR 201 Microbiology for Health Related Sciences

... Chills, fever, headache, muscle aches (no intestinal symptoms) 1% mortality due to secondary bacterial infections Vaccine for high-risk individuals ...
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(PDF, Unknown)

... Ebola is part of a group of viruses that are called hemorrhagic viruses. A hemorrhage is “an escape of blood from a ruptured blood vessel.” These viruses cause so much tissue damage that severe internal bleeding results. The Ebola virus can only spread through direct contact with body fluids (urine, ...
6 kingdoms
6 kingdoms

... • Sexual reproduction ...
Goat Sheep Blue tongue FVSU
Goat Sheep Blue tongue FVSU

... sent  in  the  reticulum  and  rumen.  In  some  cases  there  is  a  terminal  pulmonary  edema  and  these  animals  will  have  abundant  froth  in  the  trachea. A  significant  lesion that  is  thought  to occur  only  in BTV  infec­ tion  is  hemorrhage  within  the  pulmonary  artery  at  the ...
HIV/AIDS AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome) is a chronic
HIV/AIDS AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome) is a chronic

... medications and cesarean births. Infection can also take place through blood or blood products. Although these products are tested, there is a period of 6 weeks between infection with the virus and a positive test result. However, the chance of receiving a contaminated blood product remains extremel ...
DNA Viruses
DNA Viruses

... Cervical dysplasia Most are latent ...
Bacteria_Vs_Virus_16 - Kenston Local Schools
Bacteria_Vs_Virus_16 - Kenston Local Schools

... The viruses used in making flu vaccine are chosen each year on information from the year before Info is gathered by 94 countries and analyzed by: – World Health Organization (WHO) – The Centers for Disease Control (CDC): ...
Infectious Cells & Single Cell Organisms
Infectious Cells & Single Cell Organisms

... diseases are caused by a microorganism that is transmitted or spread from one organism to another. A ...
osce_feverinareturnedtraveller - OSCE-Aid
osce_feverinareturnedtraveller - OSCE-Aid

... Timing of symptoms– this is extremely important as you can work out the probability of certain infectious diseases based on the incubation periods o Onset – exactly when did the symptoms start? o What was the course of the symptoms e.g. prodrome, relapsing, progressive o Duration ...
CNS Infections III
CNS Infections III

... Sheep and cattle waste parts used to make meat and bone meal added to animal feed, which may have transferred disease to cattle through feed (crossing “species barrier”) o BSE comes from spontaneous conformational shift of bovine PrP: which then spread to other cattle through contaminated feed vCJD ...
CVI / PRS Computer Virus Information / Propagation Research System
CVI / PRS Computer Virus Information / Propagation Research System

... Computer Virus Information / Propagation Research System ...
Dengue fever
Dengue fever

... Dengue fever By: Summer Royster & Jordan Williams ...
Emerging and Zoonotic Diseases
Emerging and Zoonotic Diseases

... Leptospirosis (Leptospira spp.) is a zoonotic infection acquired from urine of infected animals. In humans, it causes fever, as well as signs referable to liver, kidneys, and brain. High risk groups have always been livestock workers and abattoir employees. Within the last ten years, outbreaks have ...
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