8: Disease Flashcards

Explain how pathogens cause disease and how organisms respond. (24 cards)

1
Q

What is meant by a pathogen in the context of disease?

A

Microorganism

Includes bacteria, viruses, fungi and protoctists that cause disease.

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2
Q

How are pathogens commonly transmitted between individuals?

A

Direct and indirect transmission

Direct = contact; indirect = vectors, air, water or surfaces.

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3
Q

What type of transmission occurs when pathogens spread via droplets in the air?

A

Airbone transmission

e.g. coughing or sneezing releases infectious droplets.

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4
Q

What is the role of a vector in disease transmission?

A

Carrier organism

Often an insect that transfers pathogens between hosts.

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5
Q

True or False:

Pathogens can only enter the body through ingestion.

A

False

Entry routes include inhalation, skin breaks and mucous membranes.

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6
Q

What physical barrier prevents many pathogens from entering the body?

A

Skin

Acts as a mechanical barrier and produces antimicrobial secretions.

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7
Q

What substance in tears and saliva helps destroy bacteria?

A

Lysozyme

Breaks down bacterial cell walls.

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8
Q

Describe the first step of phagocytosis by a white blood cell.

A

Recognition and binding

Phagocyte identifies foreign antigens on pathogen surface.

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9
Q

What happens after a pathogen is engulfed during phagocytosis?

A

Phagosome formation

The pathogen is enclosed in a vesicle inside the cell.

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10
Q

How is a pathogen destroyed inside a phagocyte?

A

Lysosomal enzymes

Lysosomes release enzymes that digest the pathogen.

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11
Q

Fill in the blanks:

The display of pathogen antigens on a phagocyte surface is called _____ _____.

A

antigen presentation

Links innate and adaptive immune responses.

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12
Q

What type of lymphocyte is responsible for producing antibodies?

A

B cell

Differentiates into plasma cells to secrete antibodies.

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13
Q

Outline the process of clonal expansion in immune response.

A

Rapid cell division

Specific lymphocytes replicate after antigen recognition.

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14
Q

What is the function of antibodies in defending against pathogens?

A

Bind antigens

Leads to neutralisation, agglutination or marking for destruction.

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15
Q

True or False:

Memory cells enable a faster secondary immune response.

A

True

They remain in the body after initial infection.

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16
Q

Why is the secondary immune response more effective than the primary response?

A

Faster and greater antibody production

Due to memory cells recognising the antigen quickly.

17
Q

Describe how vaccination leads to immunity.

A

Exposure to antigens

Stimulates memory cell formation without causing disease.

18
Q

What is herd immunity and how does it reduce disease spread?

A
  • Population-level protection
  • High vaccination rates limit transmission opportunities.
19
Q

Explain step-by-step how a virus infects a host cell.

A

Attachment → entry → replication → assembly → release

Viruses hijack host machinery to reproduce.

20
Q

Why are antibiotics ineffective against viruses?

A

Viruses lack cellular targets for antibiotics.

They don’t have metabolic processes that antibiotics target.

21
Q

True or False:

Inflammation is part of the specific immune response.

A

False

It is a non-specific (innate) response.

22
Q

How does antigen variability in pathogens impact disease control?

A

It evades immune recognition.

This complicates vaccine development.

23
Q

What is the significance of cell signalling in immune responses?

A

Activates immune cells

Coordinates defence mechanisms across the body.

24
Q

Describe how barriers, phagocytes, and lymphocytes work together in defense.

A

They form a layered defense system:

  • Barriers: prevent entry
  • Phagocytes: act quickly (innate response)
  • Lymphocytes: provide specific response (adaptive response).

Physical barriers prevent entry, innate response acts quickly, adaptive response is specific.