* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Vaccination and HIV
Plant disease resistance wikipedia , lookup
Urinary tract infection wikipedia , lookup
Vaccination wikipedia , lookup
Infection control wikipedia , lookup
Molecular mimicry wikipedia , lookup
DNA vaccination wikipedia , lookup
Sociality and disease transmission wikipedia , lookup
Immune system wikipedia , lookup
Adaptive immune system wikipedia , lookup
Adoptive cell transfer wikipedia , lookup
Cancer immunotherapy wikipedia , lookup
Immunosuppressive drug wikipedia , lookup
Neonatal infection wikipedia , lookup
Polyclonal B cell response wikipedia , lookup
Hospital-acquired infection wikipedia , lookup
Psychoneuroimmunology wikipedia , lookup
Hygiene hypothesis wikipedia , lookup
Innate immune system wikipedia , lookup
X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency wikipedia , lookup
Vaccines and Opportunistic Infections EQ: How does your body react to vaccines and opportunistic infections? Vocabulary: antiseptics, antibiotics, antibiotics resistance, vaccines, opportunistic infections, HIV, AIDS Many methods are used to control pathogens. • Antiseptics kill pathogens outside of the body. – do not target specific pathogens – examples include vinegar and soap – Can be bacteriacidal or bacteriastatic • Antibiotics kill pathogens inside the body. – target one specific bacterium or fungus – Usually made from bacteria, fungus – Destroy/inhibit formation of cell wall – not effective against viruses (because viruses do not have cell wall) – examples: penicillin (from fungi) • Antibiotic resistance can cause medicines to become ineffective. – Some bacteria in a population have genes that make them immune to antibiotics. – These bacteria spread the gene, making the antibiotics useless. A bacterium carries genes for antibiotic resistance on a plasmid. A copy of the plasmid is transferred through conjugation. Resistance is quickly spread through many bacteria. Check for Understanding 1. Explain why the same medicine does not work against the same bacterial infection the next time you are infected? Check for Understanding 2. When you have a flu and the doctor gives you medicine, explain what the antibiotics are for? Vaccines artificially produce acquired immunity. • Vaccines also control pathogens and disease. – given to prevent illness – contain the antigen of a weakened pathogen HIV and AIDS • Opportunistic infections. – occur because white blood cells cannot fight infections – if immune system were healthy, would fight these infections Leukemia is characterized by abnormal white blood cells. • Leukemia is cancer of the bone marrow. – characterized by immature white blood cells – causes weakened immune system HIV targets the immune system. • The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a virus. – attacks and weakens the immune system – is transmitted by mixing infected blood with a bodily fluid, sexual intercourse, mothers to child, and needles. • HIV infection leads to AIDS. dead T cell T cell activated B cell antibody HIV – HIV reproduces in and destroys T cells. – The body cannot replace T cells fast enough. – T cells cannot help in immune responses. • AIDS is acquired immune deficiency syndrome. – several opportunistic infections – very low amount of T cells