Title: Principles of Disease and Epidemiology
1Principles of Disease and Epidemiology
2Diseases and US
- Pathogen a disease causing microbial growth or
toxin. - Disease an abnormality in which the body or part
is not properly adjusted. The body part is
overcome by the microbe - Change in the state of health
- Infection is the invasion and growth of a
pathogen in the body
3More words
- Host Is an organism that shelters and supports
the growth of pathogens. - Pathology scientific study of disease
- Etiology cause of a disease
- Pathogenesis development of disease
- Is this a type of symbiosis?
4Normal Microbiota
- In some cases it is normal for microbes to be
growing.
5- Most mammals germ free in utero, are colonized
after birth. - Microbes that establish permanent colonies inside
or on outside of the body without causing disease
are called normal microbiota. - Transient microbiota are microbes that are stable
for a time then disappear.
6Symbiosis
- With normal microbiota, usually both species
benefit from this arrangement. - Normal microbiota can prevent infections, may
make necessary vitamins in return for nutrients
form the host. (is called.. - Opportunistic microbes may cause disease under
certain instances. - Probiotics are live microbes applied to or
ingested into the body, intended to exert a
beneficial effect.
7Normal Microbiota on the Human Body
Table 14.1
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9Skin
- Propionibacterium acnes
- Staphylococcus epidermidis
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Candida spp
- Most microbes are transient on skin.
- Why?
10Eyes
- Basically the same as that found on the skin.
- Eyes have lysozyme, few nutrients, washing by
tears.
11Nose and throat
- S. aureus
- S. epidermides
- Streptoccoccus pneumoniae
- Haemophilus
- Neisseria
12Mouth
- Streptoccoccus
- Lactobacillus
- Actinomyces
- Bacteroides
- Fusobacterium
- Treponema
- Cornebacterium
- Candida
- Over 200 species
- Idea environment
- Is a diverse environment.
- How do we know what lives in the mouth?
13Large intestine
- Bacteroides
- Fusobacterium
- Lactobacillus
- Enterococcus
- Escherichia
- Enterobacter
- Proteus
- Klebsiella
- Shigella
- Candida
- Is essentially a chemostat
- Has a large resident microbiota
14Urogenital system
- Staphylococcus epidermidis
- Enterococcus
- Lactobacillus
- Pseudomonas
- Klebsiella
- Proteius
- In urethra
- Lactobacilli
- Streptococcus
- Staphylococcus
- Bacteroides
- Clostridium
- Candida albicans
- Trichomonas vaginalis
- in vagina is acidic
15Kochs postulates
- Same pathogen must be present in every case of
the disease - Pathogen must be isolated in pure culture
- Pathogen isolated from pure culture must cause
the same disease in a healthy, susceptible
laboratory animal. - Pathogen must be isolated from this animal
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18Exceptions to Kochs postulates
- Are modified to establish etiologies of diseases
caused by viruses and fastidious bacteria, which
cannot be grown on defined media. - Some diseases are caused by a variety of
microbes. - Some diseases such as S. pyogenes can cause
several different diseases.
19- Some diseases can only occur in one organism so
we cannot run the full Kochs postulates. - Why?
20Disease classification and codification
- Vocab
- Measurements
- Recognition and patterns
21- Symptoms- change in body function
- Diagnosis- identification
- Sign- a measurable change
- Syndrome- a specific group of symptoms or signs
that always accompanies a specific disease. - Communicable diseases- transmitted directly or
indirectly from one host to another.
22- Contagious disease- is easily spread from one
person to another - No communicable diseases- are caused by microbes
that normally grow outside the body and are not
transmitted from one host to another - Clostridium tetani
23Where, how bad and how much. Words to describe ID
- Incidence- number of people contracting the
disease - Prevalence- number of cases at a particular time
- Frequency- is in terms of sporadic, endemic,
epidemic and pandemic - Acute, chronic, subacute and latent
- Herd immunity- is the presence of immunity in
most of the population
24- Local infection- affects a small area of the body
- Systemic infection- spread throughout the body
- Bacteremia- bacteria in the blood
- Septicemia- bacteria multiply in blood
- Secondary infections- occur after a host is
weakened from a primary infection - Subclinical- cannot be measured
25Severity or Duration of a Disease
- Acute disease Symptoms develop rapidly
- Chronic disease Disease develops slowly
- Subacute disease Symptoms between acute and
chronic - Latent disease Disease with a period of no
symptoms when the patient is inactive
26Recognition and patterns of disease
- Predisposing factors make the body more
susceptible to disease they include - Gender
- Climate
- Age
- Fatigue
- Nutrition
- Lifestyle
- Drug treatments
27What happens when a disease does occur?
- Incubation period- is the time between the
initial infection and the first appearance of
signs and symptoms - Prodromal- period is the first mild signs and
symptoms - Illness- is when the disease is at its height
- Decline- signs and symptoms decline
- Convalescence- time until the body returns to
predisease state
28The Stages of a Disease
Figure 14.5
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30Spreading of Infection
- Reservoir of infection provides pathogen with
conditions for survival - Human carriers, asymptomatic or latent
- Animal- zoonoses various routes
- Nonliving Reservoirs water, fertilizer ect
31Transmission of Disease
- Contact transmission
- Direct person to person transmission
- Indirect contact transmission
- Fomite a nonliving transfer (1 meter, soiled
goods) - Droplet transmission over short distances
- Vehicle transmission (water, food, air)
- Vectors (mechanical or biological)
Transmission of Disease
32Transmission of Disease
Figure 14.6a 8
33Portals of entry and Exit
- Pathogens have preferred portals of entry and
exit. - Most common portals
- Respiratory tract
- Gastrointestinal tract
- Urogenital tract
- Blood to blood
34Transmission of Disease
- Vehicle Transmission by an inanimate
reservoir (food, water) - Vectors Arthropods, especially fleas, ticks,
and mosquitoes - Mechanical Arthropod carries pathogen on feet
- Biological Pathogen reproduces in vector
35Nosocomial (Hospital-acquired) infections
- 5-15 get infections while in the hospital.
- Microbes in hospital
- Chain of transmission
- Compromised host
- Is a hospital the best place to be if you are
sick?
36Nosocomial (Hospital-Acquired) Infections
- Are acquired as a result of a hospital stay
- 5-15 of all hospital patients acquire nosocomial
infections
Figure 14.7, 9
37Nosocomial Infections
ANIMATION Nosocomial Infections Overview
Table 14.5
38Common Causes of Nosocomial Infections
Percentage of Total Infections Percentage Resistant to Antibiotics
Coagulase-negative staphylococci 25 89
S. aureus 16 80
Enterococcus 10 29
Gram-negative rods 23 5-32
C. difficile 13 None
39MRSA
- USA100 92 of health care strains
- USA300 89 of community-acquired strains
Clinical Focus, p. 422
40Which Procedure Increases the Likelihood of
Infection Most?
ANIMATION Nosocomial Infections Prevention
Clinical Focus, p. 422
41Control of Nosocomial
- Aseptic techniques
- Hand washing (40 compliance)
- Infection control staff
42Emerging Infectious diseases
- Ones that are new or changing
- Global warming
- Global transportation
- Antibiotics
- Breakdown in social order
- Governance problems
- Pesticides
- Lack of vaccination
- Lack of reporting
43Epidemiology
- Study of transmission incidence and frequency of
disease. - Data are collected and analyzed in descriptive
epidemiology - Analytical epidemiology- infected comp to
uninfected - Controlled experiments
- Case reporting
- CDC reporting
44- CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
main source of epidemiologic info in US - Publishes Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report,
reports incidence and deaths.
45Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
- Collects and analyzes epidemiological information
in the U.S. - Publishes Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
(MMWR) www.cdc.gov - Morbidity incidence of a specific notifiable
disease - Mortality deaths from notifiable diseases
- Morbidity rate number of people affected/total
population in a given time period - Mortality rate - number of deaths from a
disease/total population in a given time
46Epidemiology
- The study of where and when diseases occur
Figure 14.11
47New fields of Biological study
- Biological crimes? ASM paper
48Nosocomial outbreak (page 445)
- 7 year period 361 patients developed bacteremia
- Burkholderia cepacia identified (same strain)
- Infection within 36hr of IV
- Disappears hrs after IV removed
- Cleaning insertion site
- Iodine is negative
49Continued
- Not found in povidone-iodine
- In alcohol
- Alcohol purchase as 90 and diluted in pharmacy.
- Used the same 100l container
- Used the same tap water
- Tap water contaminated
50- How do you prevent this from happening?