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Fresco-part
Fresco-part

... capillaries, and are used for ocular health. The anti-inflammatory properties have also been helpful GI Dysbiosis. Bilberries inhibit or kill fungi, bacteria, and protozoans. ...
Chemical Inactivation of Biological Agents
Chemical Inactivation of Biological Agents

... other side a paper from a peer review journal that described testing their product against certain spores. The organism mentioned in the scientific paper was not on their label and they received a half-a-million dollar fine. So that’s how specific the EPA is about what we actually can do in terms of ...
Older Syllabus - NIMS University Distance Education
Older Syllabus - NIMS University Distance Education

... engineering. Technology, medicine and other fields required bioproducts. Biotechnology is the science for this century drawing upon the sciences of biology, chemistry, physics, engineering, computers, and information technology to develop next generation scientific breakthroughs and products. Our un ...
Widespread Distribution of Microorganisms
Widespread Distribution of Microorganisms

... Viruses are the smallest microorganisms and cannot be seen with an ordinary light microscope. The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses developed a classification system for viruses. Although hundreds of viruses are as yet unassigned, over 3,600 viral species have an approved classification ...
Pseudomonas entomophila: A Versatile Bacterium with
Pseudomonas entomophila: A Versatile Bacterium with

... Several genes in the genome of P. entomophila have been associated with its entomopathogenicity. For example, the presence of genes that encode for TccC-type insecticidal toxin are particularly striking since they are only found in entomopathogenic bacteria such as Photorhabus luminescens and Xenorh ...
Flyer "The institute for the health of the nation"
Flyer "The institute for the health of the nation"

... where the resistant pathogens occur, how their spectrum of resistance mutates, and how many antibiotics are used in Germany’s hospitals: ­improper use of these drugs promotes the development of resistance. The ways in which the pathogens spread can be traced in their genome. It has long been known t ...
Fowlpox virus vaccines for HIV and SHIV clinical and pre
Fowlpox virus vaccines for HIV and SHIV clinical and pre

... a range of antigens, including some from HIV, have involved sequential priming of the immune response with one vaccine and boosting with the same or similar antigens delivered ...
Special microbiology
Special microbiology

... 33. Because the AIDS virus weakens the immune system: A. people with AIDS are immune to all other diseases. B. the AIDS virus is spread very easily. C. the AIDS virus activates nonspecific resistance of organism D. all answers are right E. *people with AIDS are more vulnerable to other diseases. 34. ...
Lesson 8.Pathogenesis of Bacterial Infection
Lesson 8.Pathogenesis of Bacterial Infection

... grown in pure culture. 3. The organism isolated in pure culture must initiate disease when reinoculated into susceptible animals. 4. The organism should be re-isolated from the experimentally infected animals. Postulates 3. and 4. are extremely important in definite proof of the role of agent in hum ...
Immunization PHCL-B
Immunization PHCL-B

... Introduction • With this experiment, Jenner discovered that inoculation of a person with relatively harmless disease material could protect the person from a more dangerous disease. • He called this process “vaccination”, derived from the Latin name for cowpox, vaccinia. • By the time the World Hea ...
Division of Studies in English MICROBIOLOGY OUTLINE (1/4 MD
Division of Studies in English MICROBIOLOGY OUTLINE (1/4 MD

... a. Loosen the cap of the bottle containing the inoculum. b. Hold an inoculation loop in your right hand and flame the loop; then allow it to cool. c. Lift the test tube containing the inoculum with your left hand. Remove the cap/ cotton wool plug of the test tube with the little finger of your right ...
Respiratory Tract Diseases The respiratory tract is the most common
Respiratory Tract Diseases The respiratory tract is the most common

... organisms are found just inside the nares and include Staphylococcus aureus and S. epidermidis. 2. In addition to the staphylococci, aerobic corynebacteria ("diphtheroids") can be cultured from the nasal surfaces. 3. Small numbers of Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis, and Haemophilus ...
Virtual Laboratory Supplement-teaching aid
Virtual Laboratory Supplement-teaching aid

... this course of treatment be helpful if it turns out the cause was viral? Why or why not? Could this course of treatment be harmful? Answer: Antibiotics are not effective on viruses. This course of treatment would not help cure a viral infection and may kill harmless bacteria that are helpful to over ...
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Sexually Transmitted Infections

... Require the moist environments of membranes in the socalled “transitional zones” of the body—those that occur at openings between the external and internal body surfaces. These transitional zones include the vulva, vagina, and urethra of the female; the penis and urethra of the male; and the mouth, ...
Course name: BASICS OF MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND
Course name: BASICS OF MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND

... All components of teaching are obligatory. Students are allowed to miss up to 20% of the total course hours JUSTIFIABLE, provided that ALL abscenses are compensated through a colloquium. Students must be prepared for seminars and practical work, according to the topics in the schedule. Active partic ...
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View detailed information

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Division of Studies in English MICROBIOLOGY OUTLINE (1/4 MD
Division of Studies in English MICROBIOLOGY OUTLINE (1/4 MD

... a. Loosen the cap of the bottle containing the inoculum. b. Hold an inoculation loop in your right hand and flame the loop; then allow it to cool. c. Lift the test tube containing the inoculum with your left hand. Remove the cap/ cotton wool plug of the test tube with the little finger of your right ...
Microbiol Rev w Cases
Microbiol Rev w Cases

... care unit, and was subsequently intubated. Blood and nasopharyngeal cultures were sent to the bacteriology and virology laboratories. A rapid diagnostic test was positive and specific antiviral therapy was begun. ...
IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences (IOSR-JDMS)
IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences (IOSR-JDMS)

... patient. Vaccines may be contaminated with unwanted proteins or toxins, or even live viruses.Supposedly killed vaccines may not have been properly killed; attenuated vaccines may revert to the wild type .The patient may be hypersensitive to minute amounts of contaminating proteins, or immuno-comprom ...
Spinal Cord Ventral Horns and Lymphoid Organ Involvement in
Spinal Cord Ventral Horns and Lymphoid Organ Involvement in

... www.mdpi.com/journal/viruses ...
GENERAL BACTERIOLOGY 1. Bacterial cell
GENERAL BACTERIOLOGY 1. Bacterial cell

... 7. Media for microbial growth - examples The objectives of early medium design were to grow pathogenic bacteria, separate them from the other organisms present in samples and, ultimately, defferentiate their phenotypic properties so that they could be identified. Microbes can be grown on a solid med ...
Suppl Y3 Biochem of - UR-CST
Suppl Y3 Biochem of - UR-CST

... Define two ways by which viruses differ from living cells (2 marks). - Their simple, acellular organization (1 mark). - The presence of either DNA or RNA, but not both in almost all virions (1 mark) - In ability to reproduce independent cells and carry out cell division as prokaryotes and eukaryotes ...
microbiology - UtechDMD2015
microbiology - UtechDMD2015

... – Accidentially takes up chromosomal DNA – Phage replicates  bacterial gene picked up replicates – Genes carried into cells that the progeny virus infected – Occurs most often ...
Rabies*what is it???
Rabies*what is it???

... measures against bites from the animal. If another person was bitten by a rabid dog and later died, the owner was fined heavily. Contrary to that being the first written record, descriptions of rabies dates back to 1530. There are also hieroglyphics from Egypt. ...
Intergeneric transfer of Panton-Valentine Leukocidin
Intergeneric transfer of Panton-Valentine Leukocidin

... waiting for the opportune moment to kill its host. Generally, these phages are broadly classed together based upon which species of bacteria they infect, and until recently it was thought that they stay within their host range, being unable to infect different genera of bacteria. Besides its own DNA ...
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Virology

Virology is the study of viruses – submicroscopic, parasitic particles of genetic material contained in a protein coat – and virus-like agents. It focuses on the following aspects of viruses: their structure, classification and evolution, their ways to infect and exploit host cells for reproduction, their interaction with host organism physiology and immunity, the diseases they cause, the techniques to isolate and culture them, and their use in research and therapy. Virology is considered to be a subfield of microbiology or of medicine.
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