Bacterial disease - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Bacterial disease

Description:

To be able to describe the factors affecting pathogenicity of ... The skin is a good barrier to microbial ... and overcome the bodies defence mechanisms. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:59
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: SCGS
Learn more at: http://lichfield.org
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Bacterial disease


1
Bacterial disease
  • Learning objectives
  • To be able to describe the factors affecting
    pathogenicity of bacteria
  • To be able to describe modes of transmission.
  • To be able to describe precautions to avoid
    contamination of food and water.

2
Types of disease
  • Disease is a general term meaning disorder of the
    body. There are several different kinds of
    disease
  • Infectious
  • Genetic
  • Dietary deficiency
  • Environmental
  • Ageing

3
The factors affecting pathogenicity of bacteria
  • Pathogenicity is how ill an infection can make
    you
  • It is a result of the toxins produced by the
    bacteria.
  • Those released by the bacteria as waste products
    are called exotoxins
  • Endotoxins are part of the bacterial cell itself
    and are released when the bacterial cell dies and
    breaks up

4
Infectivity
  • This is the number of bacteria needed to cause an
    infection
  • Most diseases require large numbers, for example
    salmonella, although some, for example typhoid,
    requires relatively few.
  • The fewer bacteria required to trigger a disease,
    the more virulent the disease is

5
Invasiveness
  • How easily the bacteria can spread within the
    body.
  • Bacteria must avoid phagocytosis and overcome the
    bodies defence mechanisms.
  • How easily the bacteria can penetrate connective
    and fibrous tissue
  • Bacteria who can penetrate tough tissue have to
    secrete enzymes. Very few bacteria can do this
    those that can (eg bubonic plague and anthrax)
    are highly invasive

6
Attachment
  • Once the microbes has infected a new host they
    need to attach themselves firmly to the host's
    cells. Why?
  • In order to avoid being removed by cilia,
    sneezing, vomiting, diarrhoea, etc.

7
  • To do this microbes use molecules called
    adhesins, which are protein or carbohydrate
    molecules on the cell wall of bacteria.
  • These adhesin molecules bind to specific protein
    receptor molecules on the cell membranes of host
    cells forming adhesin-receptor complexes, so
    firmly attaching(or adhering) the microbe to the
    host cell.
  • Because this involves specific binding, this
    attachment is called specific adherence.

8
Adhesions
Bacterium
  • Specific adherence explains why microbes tend to
    be specific for particular species and tissue.
  • For example the malaria parasite only grows in
    red blood cells the diphtheria bacterium only
    colonises the membranes of cells in the trachea
    and the polio virus only invades nerve cells.
  • It also explains one reason why different people
    have susceptibility to certain infections.
    Individuals without the "correct" receptor cannot
    attach the pathogen and so cannot catch that
    particular disease.

Receptor
Cell membrane
9
  • Transmission

10
Transmission by Water.
  • Many pathogens can survive (though not reproduce)
    in water and so infect humans drinking that
    water.
  • Water-borne infections include cholera, typhoid,
    dysentery, gastroenterisis and food poisoning

11
Transmission by Food.
  • Food is an even better way of transmitting
    pathogens, since microbes can grow and reproduce
    in food, which they can't do in water.
  • Food can become contaminated by contact with
    humans or insects.
  • Food-borne infections include TB, botulism,
    cholera, amoebic dysentery, typhoid and
    gastroenteritis.

12
Transmission by Aerosol Droplet.
  • When an infected person coughs, sneezes, talks or
    breathes, they are transmitting their pathogens
    inside droplets of mucus, saliva or water.
  • Air-borne infections include many of the viral
    infections such as cold, flu, rubella, and some
    bacterial infections such as TB, diphtheria and
    strep throat.

13
Transmission by Direct Contact.
  • The skin is a good barrier to microbial entry,
    but some infections are still possible by contact
    with the skin.
  • Sexual intercourse is a special case of direct
    contact, and sexually-transmitted diseases (STDs)
    include the viral infections Hepatitis B and AIDS
    and the bacterial infections gonorrhoea and
    syphilis.

14
Transmission by Vectors
  • In the context of disease, a vector is an animal
    that transmits a pathogenic microbe between other
    animals.
  • Examples include rabies (transmitted by dogs),
    malaria (transmitted by mosquitoes), sleeping
    sickness (transmitted by tsetse flies) and yellow
    fever (transmitted by mosquitoes).

15
Entry
  • Some bacterial and fungal pathogens remain
    attached to the outer surface of human cells or
    colonise extracellular spaces in humans, such as
    the lumen of the gut, alveoli, or tissue fluid.
  • These are termed extracellular pathogens.

16
  • Intracellular pathogens enter the cell. Entry is
    achieved in different ways
  • Some bacteria secrete invasin enzymes, which
    digest the cell membrane of the host cell,
    allowing the bacterial cell to enter it.
  • Sometimes the specific adherence described above
    stimulates endocytosis by the host cell, which
    brings the microbe cell inside the host cell. The
    host cell may then try to digest the microbe
    cell, but if the bacterium has a capsule it may
    be protected.

17
  • By reproducing inside host cells. Viruses,
    bacteria and protoctists can all colonise living
    cells and reproduce inside them, using up
    cellular resources and preventing the cell from
    carrying out its normal reactions.
  • The microbes then usually burst out of the host
    cell, rupturing the cell membrane and killing the
    cell in the process.

18
  • Which bacterium is the main cause of diarrhoea?
  • How is it spread?
  • What do the toxins cause?
  • How does ORT help patients suffering from
    diarrhoea?
  • What does the exotoxin secreted by the diptheria
    bacterium do?
  • The bacterial disease tetanus causes muscle
    spasms. How?
  • Exotoxins are detected by the body as foreign
    proteins. How is this effect exploited?
  • What effect do endotoxins have on the body?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com