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Lesson 1 Lesson 2 Lesson 3 & 4 Lesson 5 Lesson 6 Lesson 7 Lesson 8 Lesson 9 2.2.2 Health and Disease • All – Recall keywords • Most – Describe the different types of pathogen with examples • Some – Explain how different factors can affect the epidemiology of certain diseases. 2.2.2 Health and Disease • All – Recall keywords • Most – Describe the different types of pathogen with examples • Some – Explain how different factors can affect the epidemiology of certain diseases. What is HEALTH? Health is more than simply the absence of disease. It can be defined as your physical, mental and social wellbeing. If you are in good health you are… •Free from disease •Able to carry out normal physical and mental tasks •Well fed, with a balanced diet •Usually happy, with a positive outlook •Suitably housed with proper sanitation •Well integrated into society Draw a table with 4 columns showing what type of microbe causes these infectious diseases… Mumps Athlete’s foot Typhoid dysentery Influenza Tuberculosis Malaria Chicken Pox HIV Cholera Ring worm Type of microbe Bacteria Virus Protozoa Fungus Dysentery Ring worm Malaria Athlete’s foot HIV Infectious disease Cholera Mumps Tuberculosis Influenza Typhoid Chicken pox Match the key word to the definition 1. The rate of occurrence of new cases of a particular disease in a population being studied 2. A branch of medical science that deals with the incidence, distribution, and control of disease in a population 3. A micro-organism which causes disease 4. The total number of cases of a disease in a given population at a specific time. 5. Anything which impairs the normal functioning of the body. 6. ‘A state of complete physical, mental and social wellbeing and not merely the absence of disease of infirmity’ (World Health Organisation) 7. An organism that grows, feeds, and is sheltered on or in a different organism while contributing nothing to the survival of its host, even causing it damage Incidence, Pathogen, Epidemiology, Parasite, Health, Disease, Prevalence, Match the key word to the definition Health: ‘A state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease of infirmity’ (World Health Organisation) Disease: Anything which impairs the normal functioning of the body. Pathogen: A micro-organism which causes disease Parasite: An organism that grows, feeds, and is sheltered on or in a different organism while contributing nothing to the survival of its host, even causing it damage Epidemiology: a branch of medical science that deals with the incidence, distribution, and control of disease in a population Prevalence: The total number of cases of a disease in a given population at a specific time. Incidence: The rate of occurrence of new cases of a particular disease in a population being studied Tuberculosis Mycobacterium tuberculosis DOTs: Directly observed therapy HIV virus Capsid, made of protein RNA molecule Core Reverse transcriptase (makes DNA from RNA) Phospholipid Envelope Glycoprotein 5nm Malaria Plasmodium lifecycle • Zygotes of the parasite undergo a stage of asexual reproduction in the mosquito’s gut wall • The parasite returns to the blood and invades the red blood cells • Here the parasite produces gametes (sexual stage) • More reproduction within RBCs causes these cells to swell and burst (lysis) • The mosquito feeds on the blood of a non-infected human • Anopheles mosquito ingests a blood meal from an infected human • Plasmodium is transferred from the human to the stomach of the mosquito • Plasmodium transferred from mosquito to human • Plasmodium migrate to the human’s liver to undergo asexual reproduction • Fertilisation occurs Plasmodium lifecycle • Anopheles mosquito ingests a blood meal from an infected human • Plasmodium is transferred from the human to the stomach of the mosquito • Here the parasite produces gametes (sexual stage) • Fertilisation occurs • Zygotes of the parasite undergo a stage of asexual reproduction in the mosquito’s gut wall • The mosquito feeds on the blood of a non-infected human • Plasmodium transferred from mosquito to human • Plasmodium migrate to the human’s liver to undergo asexual reproduction • The parasite returns to the blood and invades the red blood cells • More reproduction within RBCs causes these cells to swell and burst (lysis) Prophylactics Prevention is better than a cure!! Disease TB Malaria Pathogen Method of transmission Effects on body Treatment Human immunodeficiency virus (retrovirus) Unsafe sex, shared needles, needle stick injuries Infect lung cells – night sweats, cough, bloody mucus Combination therapy to slow viral replication eg AZT Plasmodium falciparum or P.virax (protozoa) Affects immune Airborne system (T droplets, lymphocytes) so unpasteurized oppurtunistic milk infections take Antibiotic courses eg. Streptomycin and rifampin over Mycobacterium HIV/AIDS tuberculosis or M.bovis Anopheles mosquito vector Infects red blood cells, results in fever Prophylactics and antimalarials eg quinine Disease TB Malaria HIV/AIDS Pathogen Method of transmission Effects on body Infect lung cells Mycobacterium Airborne – night sweats, tuberculosis or droplets, M.bovis unpasteurized cough, bloody mucus milk Plasmodium falciparum or P.virax (protozoa) Human immunodeficiency virus (retrovirus) Anopheles mosquito vector Unsafe sex, shared needles, needle stick injuries Infects red blood cells, results in fever Affects immune system (T lymphocytes) so oppurtunistic infections take over Treatment Antibiotic courses eg. Streptomycin and rifampin Prophylactics and antimalarials eg quinine Combination therapy to slow viral replication eg AZT Can you explain each of the following trends in epidemiology of disease? (use pg 167 to help if unsure) 1. 2. 3. 4. People who live in crowded conditions are at most risk of contracting TB From the middle of the 19th century the incidence of TB has decreased In the late 1980s there was a dramatic increase of TB in the UK There are certain strains of antibiotic resistant TB emerging