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Special structure
Special structure

... plasma membrane to give them shape and protect them from osmotic lysis. Bacterial walls are chemically complex and usually contain peptidoglycan or murein. ...
Disease/disorder Potential role of the microbiome Recent findings HIV
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Bacterial STI`s
Bacterial STI`s

... injury or irritation; characterized by pain and swelling and redness and heat • The Urethra, which, “is a tube which connects the urinary bladder to the outside of the body. The urethra has an excretory function in both sexes to pass urine to the outside, and also a reproductive function in the male ...
Bacteria and the body
Bacteria and the body

... have a higher chance of developing asthma and allergies. This is not to say beneficial bacteria can't also be dangerous. Usually, helpful bacteria and harmful bacteria are mutually exclusive, Maczulak said. But there is overlap, notably in the bacteria that inhabit the body. "Staph bacteria is a goo ...
Bacteria
Bacteria

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Bell Ringer - Effingham County Schools
Bell Ringer - Effingham County Schools

... Gram positive bacteria appear violet and gram negative appear read. This difference in color is due to ____________________________________________________ Bacteria that need oxygen are ________________________. Bacteria that do not use oxygen are ______________________. Bacteria that use oxygen but ...
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Sexually Transmitted Diseases

... Most people with herpes simplex 2 do not know that they have it. First outbreak happens 2-3 weeks after infection. Can also have flu-like symptoms. These sores can be painful. No cure, but treatment can reduce number of outbreaks. ...
The Structure within Cytoplasm
The Structure within Cytoplasm

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Penicillin
Penicillin

... • E. coli is the lab rat of the bacterial world. • E. coli is a normal resident of the large intestine in healthy people. It is a type of probiotic organism because it crowds out disease causing bacteria. E. coli also makes vitamin K which humans require to be healthy. • Although it is generally a g ...
Using serial dilutions and plating to establish viable bacterial cell
Using serial dilutions and plating to establish viable bacterial cell

... microorganisms using a haemocytometer, or by serial diluting the bacteria and plating the diluted bacteria on media that supports the growth of the micro-organisms. The latter method is somewhat more time consuming, but provides statistically accurate and repeatable results. This method is also the ...
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Slide 1

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Diarrhea Diarrhea is frequent, loose, watery stools. Everyone has

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Jejunal Stricture: single manifestation of Crohn`s Disease
Jejunal Stricture: single manifestation of Crohn`s Disease

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Where can we find bacteria?

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Prokaryotes
Prokaryotes

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A2_Examples of Evolution
A2_Examples of Evolution

... offspring and their offspring. These colonies can have so many individual cells that, within hours or days, it will be large enough to see with the naked eye. Organisms with fast generation times, like bacteria, have the capacity for very rapid adaptation to a changing environment. Since evolutionar ...
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... ...
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pGLO prepostab

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Bacillus anthracis
Bacillus anthracis

... aliphatic oligomers display a strong propensity for helix formation in solution and in the solid state. More particularly, it has been shown that short chain oligoureas (8-mers) display a significant activity in vitro against both Gram-negative and positive bacteria and show some selectivity for bac ...
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Mohammed Shahin\Sohaib Fahmawi 6 6 Mustafa Saffarini Bio

...  Scenario one: If we are to incubate 10 cells in a liquid growth media with optimum conditions, and we monitored it over time what will happen to the number of the bacterial cells? It will increase.  Lag phase: Yet if the generation time is 30mins and we only left it for 30mins and came back to o ...
Bacteria
Bacteria

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Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders
Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders

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Veterinary Bacteriology and Virology 101
Veterinary Bacteriology and Virology 101

... Eukaryotic (plant/animal/etc) DNA usually exists in long coils of double-helixed DNA. Bacterial DNA exists in circles of chromosomes rather than the X’s we are more familiar with in plants and animals. ...
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Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth



Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), also termed bacterial overgrowth, or small bowel bacterial overgrowth syndrome (SBBOS), is a disorder of excessive bacterial growth in the small intestine. Unlike the colon (or large bowel), which is rich with bacteria, the small bowel usually has fewer than 104 organisms per millilitre. Patients with bacterial overgrowth typically develop symptoms including nausea, bloating, vomiting, diarrhea, malnutrition, weight loss and malabsorption which is caused by a number of mechanisms.The diagnosis of bacterial overgrowth is made by a number of techniques, with the gold standard diagnosis being an aspirate from the jejunum that grows in excess of 105 bacteria per millilitre. Risk factors for the development of bacterial overgrowth include dysmotility, anatomical disturbances in the bowel, including fistulae, diverticula and blind loops created after surgery, and resection of the ileo-cecal valve, gastroenteritis induced alterations to the small intestine as well as the use of certain medications, including proton pump inhibitors. Small bowel bacterial overgrowth syndrome is treated with an elemental diet or else antibiotics, which may be given in a cyclic fashion to prevent tolerance to the antibiotics sometimes followed by prokinetic drugs to prevent recurrence if dysmotility is a suspected cause.
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