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Transcript
Pathology
Pathology is defined as the scientific study of the nature of disease and its causes,
processes, development, and consequences. A pathogen is a disease causing agent,
such as bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites.
This unit will focus on 3 areas of Pathology:
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virology
bacteriology
parasitology
Definitions
Host - organism which provides nutrients, etc. to another organism
Parasite - organism which lives at the expense of (and may even harm) its host; the
parasite is generally smaller than the host and is metabolically dependent upon it
Pathogen - the disease causing agent (virus,
bacteria, fungus, etc.)
Vector - intermediate carrier of disease
(mosquito)
Disease - an upset in the homeostasis of the
host, resulting in generation of observable
changes
Symptom - evidence of damage to the host
(headache)
Infectious disease - one in which detrimental
changes in health of the host occur as a result
of damage caused by a parasite, can be
transmitted
Virulence - a measure of pathogenicity, which
is the ability to cause disease (a microorganism
that causes disease is virulent)
Epidemic - when a disease affects a
community
Pandemic - when a disease affects the world
Endemic - Any disease with a low to moderate incidence rate in the population, such
a the common cold
Disease Categories
Food and Water borne - pathogen is in a food or water source
Blood Borne - carried in blood or other bodily fluids
Sexually Transmitted - transmitted by sexual contact
Zoonotic - carried by animals
Airborne - carried by the air, often affect respiratory tract
Warm Up Exercises for Discussion
1. Name as many diseases as you can think of, star the ones that you would consider
to be *infectious*.
2. Come up with a definition and example for each of the word pairs (small groups)
Disease and Infectious Disease
Water-borne and Blood Borne
Antibiotic and Antiseptic
Vaccine and Antibiotic
Parasite and Host
Immunity and Resistance
Virus and Bacteria
Common-Source - disease that infect populations from a contaminated source, such
as water
Host-to-Host - diseases that are transferred directly from infected people (or
animals)
Organizations Dealing with Health - Centers for Disease Control (CDC), World Health
Organization (WHO), US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), U.S. Army
Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID)
Koch's Postulates
If a microorganism is the causative agent of an infectious disease, it must be:
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
The microorganism must be found in abundance in all organisms suffering
from the disease, but should not be found in healthy animals. *
The microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and grown in
pure culture.
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The cultured microorganism should cause disease when introduced into a
healthy organism.
The microorganism must be re-isolated from the inoculated, diseased
experimental host and identified as being identical to the original specific
causative agent.
Basically, Robert Koch established a scientific method for establishing the cause of a
disease. In doing so, he pioneered the field of microbiology. He received a Nobel
Prize in 1905 for isolating bacteria that caused anthrax, tuberculosis and cholera.
Steps in Pathogenesis
To cause disease, a pathogen must:
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Contact the host - be transmissible
Colonize the host - adhere to and grow or multiply on host surfaces
Infect the host - proliferate in host cells or tissues
Evade the host defense system - by avoiding contact that will damage it
Damage host tissues - by physical (mechanical) or chemical means
Milestones in the History of Medicine
When
Who
What
1796
Edward Jenner
Smallpox vaccine (though they didn't understand how or why it
worked). Tested it on his own child.
1850
Ignaz Semmelweis
Advocated washing hands to prevent spread of childbed fever
1862
Louis Pasteur
Disproved spontaneous generation, supported the Germ Theory
1867
Joseph Lister
Implemented the sterilization of medical instruments and washing
of hands between procedures
18761882
Robert Koch
Koch's Postulates - determined a methodology for identifying
pathogens, identified agents that caused Cholera, Tuberculosis.
Germ Theory gains more acceptance
1885
Louis Pasteur
Rabies Vaccine
1928
Alexander Fleming
Discovered penicillin
1953
Jonas Salk
Polio vaccine
1980
World Health
Declares smallpox eradicated
Organization
1983
Discover and Identification of AIDS virus (HIV)
Overview of Some Diseases (icky pictures)
Chart of Common Bacterial and Viral Diseases
The Germ Theory (around 1860)
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single most important contribution by the science of microbiology to the
general welfare of the world's people
The theory that microorganisms may be the cause of some or all disease.
Key to developing the germ theory of disease was a refutation of the concept
of spontaneous generation.
Specific aseptic techniques are employed to avoid microbial contamination
Method of prevention of spoilage of liquid foodstuffs - Pasteurization