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Disease

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Title: Disease


1
Lecture 25
  • Disease

2
Health
  • a state of complete physical, mental and social
    well being ..World Health Organisation (WHO)

3
Disease
  • Infectious or communicable diseases diseases
    caused by other living organisms, they can be
    transmitted from one person to another.
  • Non infectious diseases social, deficiency,
    genetic or congenital (present at birth), ageing
    and degenerative, mental illness. These are not
    transmitted by contact.

4
Infection
  • The successful invasion, establishment and
    growth of microorganisms in the tissues of the
    host.

5
Association Between Microbe and Man
  • Parasitic one benefits at the expense of the
    other.
  • Symbiotic mutual benefit.
  • Commensalism one organism derives benefit by
    living near on on its surface without causing any
    damage.

6
Terminology
  • Disease state of being not in good health (not
    at ease, "dis-ease").
  • Every disease is a race between pathogen trying
    to gain a foothold and host defences trying to
    prevent pathogen. Many factors involved
    virulence and numbers of pathogen, health and age
    of host, etc.
  • Wrong to equate "one pathogen" disease. Much
    more complex.
  • Parasite often used to refer to protozoans or
    worms the term "Pathogen" is typically used when
    referring to bacteria, virus, or fungus that
    causes disease. All are parasitic.

7
Terminology
  • Pathogen organism with potential to cause
    disease
  • Infection pathogen is growing in or on host
  • Virulence degree or intensity of pathogenicity
  • Invasiveness ability of pathogen to spread to
    other tissues in body
  • Infectivity ability of pathogen to establish
    infection
  • Toxigenicity ability of pathogen to secrete
    toxins
  • Septicemia infection in which pathogen grows
    massively in the body, being found in blood and
    throughout organs. Usually leads to death

8
Koch's Postulates
  • Developed in late 1800's , provide basic logical
    proof that disease is caused by a microbe
  • Microbe must be present in every case of disease,
    but absent from healthy individuals.
  • Suspected microbe must be isolated from diseased
    host and grown in culture.
  • Same disease must result when isolated microbe is
    introduced into healthy host.
  • Same microbe must be isolated again from second
    diseased host

9
Epidemiology
  • Tracking the incidence and patterns of disease.
  • Depends critically on data. Accuracy much better
    in developed countries than in most developing
    countries.
  • Global World Health Organization (WHO) in Geneva
    maintains records on health statistics, infection
    rates, epidemics in most of World. View The World
    Health Report 2001

10
Epidemiology
  • U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    (CDC) maintains records on health statistics,
    infection rates, epidemics in U. S.
  • Every licensed clinic, physician, hospital must
    submit weekly reports of every instance of
    reportable diseases (about 50 on current list) to
    state public health office, which forwards this
    information to CDC.
  • CDC publishes weekly reports (now available on
    Web and via e-mail) Morbidity Mortality Weekly
    Reports.
  • View Morbidity Mortality Weekly Report summary
    from CDC (Centers for Disease Control)
  • U.S. and other countries in developed world have
    cut many diseases by sanitation, public health
    (vaccines, etc.)

11
Spread of Infection
  • Multiply within host
  • Spread from one host to another two types of
    transfer horizontal and vertical.
  • Horizontal spread polio, influenza, thyphoid.
    Spread by infected air, water, food or by insect
    vectors.
  • Vertical spread parent to offspring congenital
    rubella, leukemia viruses.
  • Zoonoses spread of infection from one species
    to another.

12
Intracellular vs Extracellular Pathogens
  • Most pathogens have evolved to live either inside
    or outside of host cells, rarely if ever in both
    habitats.
  • Inside the cell intracellular
  • Outside the cell - extracellular

13
Intracellular Life
  • Poses special problems for host.
  • Can't easily attack pathogen without harming its
    own tissues. Many pathogens are adapted for
    intracellular life, including all viruses,
    certain bacteria (e.g. TB, plague),
  • Since white blood cells (macrophages,
    lymphocytes) are major components of defence
    system, many successful pathogens target these
    cells specifically for intracellular growth.
  • Problem to be successful, pathogen at some point
    must leave cells, exit host. Best chance to
    prevent infection is sometime during exit --
    transmission -- entry to new host, before it has
    a chance to hide in new cells.
  • Some intracellular parasites are so highly
    evolved that they can't survive at all outside
    their host's cells. Ex Chlamydia, Rickettsia. To
    be successful, these must rely on mechanisms such
    as sexual contact or animal bites to transmit
    them to new hosts.

14
Extracellular Life
  • Pathogen must deal with host's defensive
    strategies white blood cells, immune system,
    etc.
  • But does provide greater opportunities for grown,
    reproduction, and spreading than living inside
    cells.
  • Can rapidly colonize a habitat Ex. when cholera
    invades intestine, can quickly multiply, spread
    to cover large surface area
  • Typical bacterial pathogens that act
    extracellularly E. coli, Pseudomonas sp., Vibrio
    cholera

15
Virulence Factors
  • Virulence Factors are specific adaptations that
    allow pathogen to
  • Attach selectively to host tissues.
  • Gain access to nutrients by invading or
    destroying
  • host tissues.
  • 3. Avoid host defences.
  • 4. Toxins exotoxins and endotoxins.
  • 5. Siderophores.

16
1. Specific attachment entry factors
  • Pathogen must be able to bind to some receptor
    molecule on cell surfaces. These typically have
    necessary functions for cell.
  • Most diseases are tissue specific, because only
    certain tissues have receptor molecule needed.
    Ex HIV binds to cells that have CD4 receptor
    (only certain lymphocytes).
  • Fimbriae or pili are used by some bacteria to
    attach selectively to certain tissues. Ex
    Neisseria gonorrhaea binds to genital epithelium
    by fimbriae. In mutant cells w/o fimbriae,
    infectivity and pathogenicity are lost.

17
2. Invasive enzymes
  • Many bacteria have specific enzymes that allow
    cells to penetrate host tissues
  • Example 1 collagenase produced by Clostridium
    perfringens. Enzyme degrades collagen, the
    primary structural fibre of connective tissue
    (25 of body's protein), allows penetration
    deeper into tissues ---gt fulminating gangrene.
    Strictly anaerobic process, only occurs when
    tissue is damaged so blood can't supply oxygen
    (e.g. serious wounds, frostbite).
  • Example 2 hemolysin enzymes produced by
    Streptococcus pyogenes dissolves cell membranes
    of tissues, produces typical symptoms of "strep
    throat".

18
3. Tricks to avoid host defenses
  • Capsules - Many pathogens have thick
    extracellular polysaccharide capsules. Capsules
    inhibit phagocytosis, prevent quick disposal of
    bacterium by WBCs. Loss of capsule typically
    causes loss of infectivity.
  • "Nasty Enzymes" Leukocidins - some pathogens
    secrete chemicals that specifically kill WBCs.
    Eg Staphylococcus aureus. Accumulation of pus at
    infected site is caused by dead WBCs. Coagulase -
    Staph. aureus produces enzyme that coagulates
    blood. Result WBCs, other body defences can't
    reach site of infection. Staph typically remains
    localized, "walled off" from defenses, produces
    many nasty types of localized infections such as
    boils, abcesses, etc.

19
4. Exotoxins
  • Most exotoxins are proteins, secreted from cell,
    often damaging tissues at some distance. Very
    potent, small amounts are very toxic.
  • Often coded by plasmid DNA (ex. E. coli) or
    lysogenic phage DNA (ex. botulism, diphtheria)
  • Almost always inactivated by heat. Most are good
    antigens when inactive, can make toxoids
    (antigens without poison activity) strong
    immune response.
  • Visit cholera (Vibrio cholerae) web page from
    Bacteriology 330, by Kenneth Todar, University of
    Wisconsin Department of Bacteriology

20
4. Exotoxins
  • 1. Diphtheria toxin.
  • Corynebacterium diphtheriae.
  • Enters cell, inactivates elongation factor needed
    for protein synthesis.
  • Cell gradually loses ability to make proteins
    (same toxin molecule keeps inactivating more and
    more factors), shuts down.
  • 2. Botulin toxin, a neurotoxin (attacks nervous
    system).
  • Clostridium botulinum, anerobic soil bacterium.
  • Most potent toxin known- 1 gram could kill 10
    million people.
  • Toxin interferes with synaptic transmission at
    nerve-muscle junctions ---gt flaccid paralysis.
  • Occurs most typically in improperly canned

21
4. Exotoxins
  • 3. Tetanus toxin, another neurotoxin.
  • Clostridium tetanus, anerobic soil bacterium.
  • Blocks synaptic transmission to inhibitory
    neurons, leads to rigid paralysis.
  • Common from deep wounds, pulled teeth.
  • Treatment antitoxin.
  • Prevention toxoid immunization (lasts 5-10 yrs).
  • 4. Cholera toxin an enterotoxin (attacks
    enteric tract).
  • Vibrio cholerae. is free-living in fresh water.
  • Binds to receptors on intestinal cells,
    chemically alters molecule involved in c-AMP
    production, leaves cAMP stuck in the "on"
    position.
  • Causes massive outflow of water (chasing outflow
    of Na/Cl-). Similar mode of action for other
    enterotoxin.
  • Can be spread by drinking water, food (shellfish
    common).
  • Untreated, mortality is 50. With fluid
    replacement, lt1. Prevention clean drinking
    water.

22
4. Endotoxins
  • Endotoxins are integral parts of Gram-negative
    outer membrane ( LPS, lipolysaccharide).
  • Unlike Exotoxins, they are typically heat
    resistant, active only in sizable amounts, and
    remain bound to cells.
  • Mechanism of action is very diverse. "When we
    sense LPS, we are likely to turn on every defence
    at our disposal" (Lewis Thomas), including fever,
    decrease in iron, inflammation, blood clotting,
    reduced sugar in blood, etc. Most important
    clinical problems are fever and shock.
  • Typical scenario Gram-negative bacteria (e.g. E.
    coli, Pseudomonas) enter body via clinical
    procedure (improperly sterilized kidney dialysis
    tubing, catheter, etc.), cause sudden decrease in
    blood pressure (hypotension) "septic shock".
    Can be lethal.

23
5. Siderophores
  • Iron plays special role in control of infection.
  • Most bacteria require iron to synthesize
    cytochromes.
  • Iron in human body is tightly bound, either in
    hemoglobin (blood cells), on transferrin proteins
    (serum and lymph), or lactoferrin (milk, tears,
    saliva, mucus, etc.).
  • Some bacteria (Streptococci) do not require iron
    -- metabolism is strictly fermentative, no
    respiratory system. But most bacteria have to
    find way to get iron or cannot grow.
  • Siderophores iron-binding factors that allow
    some bacteria to compete with the host for iron.
    Ex Enterochelin produced by enteric bacteria (E.
    coli, Salmonella). Mutants that cannot synthesize
    enterochelin lose virulence. These mutants can
    regain virulence if pure enterochelin is injected
    along with mutant bacteria.

24
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25
Common Infections
26
Diseases of Developing Countries
27
Controlling Infectious Diseases
  • Treatment prophylaxis such as antibiotics,
    antiviral drugs.
  • Prevention hygiene, disinfectants,
    sterilization, antiseptics and vaccination.

28
Antiseptics and Disinfectants
  • Chemical substances that destroy microorganisms.
  • Antiseptic can be applied safely to the body. e.g
    on skin, ethanol and isopropanol.
  • Disinfectants cannot be used on the body directly
    but are used to clear work surfaces, crockery,
    cutlery, instruments etc. e.g hypochlorites in
    commercial disinfectants, phenol, aldehydes,
    chlorxylenol (dettol) and iodine in more dilute
    form can be used as antiseptics.

29
Sterilisation
  • Removal of any living organisms from a non-living
    object or material. E.g water, operating theatre
    gowns.
  • Heat pasteurising milk , tinned food.
  • Steam - autoclave where steam under pressure is
    fed into a sealed chamber.
  • Radiation Longer wave lengths have no effect
    shorter wavelength such as UV light results in
    death.

30
Vaccination
  • Giving antigens from a disease causing organism,
    either by injection or orally.
  • In order for the immune system to learn to make
    antibodies against the organism.
  • So that the body will be able to respond fast
    enough to prevent the organism from causing an
    infection.
  • Artificial active immunity

31
Different Types of Vaccines
  • Toxoid detoxified yet antigenic property
    remains and when used as a vaccine will elicit
    production of antibodies in the host e.g tetanus
    toxoid
  • Killed organisms heat inactivated e.g flu
    vaccine
  • Live organisms attenuated e.g measles vaccine
  • New vaccines genetic engineering has enabled
    antigens to be made in bacteria and isolated,
    purified and used in a vaccine.

32
Infectious Diseases
  • The spread of an infectious disease is critically
    influenced by social, economic, and behavioral
    factors in the human population.
  • In infected populations, viruses and their hosts
    co-evolve, with each influencing the other's
    destiny.
  • Often the most successful pathogens evolve to
    avoid killing their hosts.
  • Infectious diseases will never be eradicated as a
    group, but individual diseases can be controlled
    through public health measures, vaccination, and
    specific therapy.

33
Assignment 8Common Infections
  • What organisms cause the following infections?
  • Give details of symptoms and how are the
    infections are
  • treated.
  • Measles
  • Chicken Pox
  • Hepatitis (Jaundice)
  • Malaria
  • Diarrhoeal diseases
  • Mumps
  • Throat Infections
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