microbiology test chapters 9, 10, 11
prodromal stage
1-2 day period when the earliest notable symptoms of infection appear
syndrome
a disease identified by a certain complex of signs and symptoms
communicable
a disease in which an infected host can transmit the infectious agent to another host
contagious
a disease that is highly communicable, especially through direct contact
latency
a dormant state of microbes in certain chronic infectious disease - viral, bacterial
septicemia
a general state in which microorganisms are multiplying in the blood and are present in large numbers
toxin
a specific chemical product of microbes, plants, and some animals that is poisonous to other organisms
virulence
ability of a microbe to establish itself and harm the host
necrosis
accumulated damage due to pathogens leading to cell and tissue death
biological vector
actively participates in a pathogen's life cycle, serving as a site in which it can multiply or complete its life cycle
sporicide
an agent capable of destroying bacterial endospores
carrier
an individual who inconspicuously shelters a pathogen and spread it to others
zoonosis
an infection indigenous to animals but naturally transmissible to humans
noncommunicable
an infectious disease that does not arise through transmission of the infectious agent from host to host
endemic
an infectious disease that exhibits a relatively steady frequency over a long time period in a particular geographic locale
pathogenicity
an organism's potential to cause infection or disease
asepsis
any practice that prevents the entry of infectious agents into sterile tissues and thus prevent infection
bacteremia or viremia
bacteria or viruses are present in the blood but not multiplying
true pathogens
capable of causing disease in healthy persons with normal immune defenses
mechanical vector
carries the microbe more or less accidentally on its body parts
coagulase
causes clotting of blood or plasma
phagocytes
cells that engulf and destroy host pathogens by means of enzymes and antimicrobial chemicals
antiseptics
chemical agents applied directly to exposed body surfaces (skin and mucous membranes), wounds, and surgical incisions to prevent vegetative pathogens
antisepsis
chemical agents are applied to the skin
germicide/microbicide
chemical agents that kill microorganisms
bacteristatic
chemical agents that prevent the growth of bacteria on tissues or on objects in the environment
virucide
chemical known to inactivate viruses, especially on living tissue
fungicide
chemical that can kill fungal spores
bactericide
chemical that destroys bacteria except for those at the endospore stage
tinctures
chemicals dissolved in pure alcohol or water-alcohol mixtures
aqueous solutions
chemicals dissolved in pure water as the solvent
fungistatic
chemicals that inhibit fungal growth
leukopenia
decrease in white blood cell levels
hyaluronidase
digests the ground substance that cements animal cells together
mucinas
digests the protective coating on mucous membranes
hemolysins (Ex. S. aureus, S. pyogenes)
disrupt the membrane of red blood cells to release hemoglobin
kinase
dissolves fibrin clots
filtration
effective method to remove microbes from air and liquids-cellulose acetate, filters, unglazed porcelain, charcoal, plastics
radiation
energy emitted from atomic activities and dispersed at high velocity through matter or space gamma rays, X rays, ultraviolet radiation
exoenzymes
enzymes secreted by microbes that break down and inflict damage on tissues
psychrophiles
grow slowly at freezing temperatures and can secrete toxic products
leukocytosis
increase in white blood cell levels
transmitter
individual or object from which an infection is acquired
nosocomial infections
infections acquired or developed during a hospital stay
point-source epidemic
infectious agent came from a single source, and all of its "victims" were exposed to it from that source
period of invasion
infectious agent multiplies at high levels, exhibits greatest toxicity, becomes well established in host issue
leukocidins (Ex. Streptococcus and Staphylococcus)
kill phagocytes outright;
florence nightingale
laid the foundations of modern epidemiology
endotoxin (lipid A)
lipopolysaccharide (LPS), part of the outer membrane of gram- negative cell walls
sequelae
long-term or permanent damage to tissues or organs cause by infectious diseases
stasis and static
mean "to stand still"
incidence
measures the number of new cases over a certain time period (morbidity rate)
mortality rate
measures the total number of deaths in a population due to a certain disease
endogenous
microbe already existing on or in the body - normal biota or a previously silent infection
exogenous
microbe originating from a source outside the body from the environment or another person or animal
pathogen
microbe whose relationship with its host is parasitic and results in infection and disease
opportunistic pathogens
not considered pathogenic to a normal, healthy person
sign
objective evidence of disease as noted by an observer
sporadic
occasional cases are reported at irregular intervals at random locales
convalescent period
patient begins to respond to the infection and symptoms decline
sanitization/decontamination
physical removal of microorganisms and debris-eating utensils
aseptic techniques
practiced in healthcare; range from sterile methods to antisepsis
reservoir
primary habitat in the natural world from which a pathogen originates
disinfection
procedure or chemical that destroys vegetative pathogens but not spores on non-living surface
adhesion
process by which microbes gain a more stable foothold on host tissues
sterilization
process that destroys or removes all viable microorganisms (viruses)
exotoxins
proteins with a strong specificity for a target cell and extremely powerful, sometimes deadly effects on membrane
lyophilization
pure cultures are frozen instantaneously and exposed to a vacuum that removes water, avoiding the formation of ice crystals
degerming/antisepsis
removal of microorganisms on skin
common-source epidemic
result from common exposure to a single source of infection over a period of time
propagated epidemic
results from an infectious agent that is communicable from person to person and is sustained over time in a population
thermal death time (TDT)
shortest length of time required to kill all test microbes at a specified temperature
commercial sterilization
sterilization plus endospores
epidemiology
study of frequency and distribution of disease and other health-related factors in defined populations
symptom
subjective evidence of disease as sensed by the patient
lymphadentitis
swollen lymph nodes
infectious
synonymous with communicable
edema
the accumulation of fluid in afflicted tissue
etiologic/causative agent
the cause of infection and disease
infectious disease
the disruption of a tissue or organism caused by microbes or their products
index case
the first patient found in an epidemiological investigation
sepsis
the growth of microorganisms in the blood and other tissues
thermal death point (TDP)
the lowest temperature required to kill all microbes in a sample in 10 minutes
infectious dose (ID)
the minimum number of microbes necessary to cause an infection to proceed
portal of entry
the route that a microbe takes to enter the tissues of the body to initiate an infection
incubation period
the time from initial contact with the infectious agent to the appearance of symptoms
prevalence
the total number of existing cases with respect to the entire population
dessication
vegetative cells directly exposed to normal room temperature gradually become dehydrated
granulomas and abscesses
walled-off collections of inflammatory cells and microbes in the tissues
chemical agent in microbial control dissolved in pure H2O 70% alcohol is the best
what are aqueous solutions?
formaldehyde, radiation, ethylene oxide
what are examples of chemical agents that target cellular synthesis
moist heat, alcohol, phenolics
what are examples of chemical agents that target proteins?
detergents
what are examples of chemical agents that target the cell membrane?
chemicals, detergents, alcohol
what are examples of chemical agents that target the cell wall
chemical agent in microbial control dissolved in pure alcohol iodine where: 1% I2 + 70% ethanol = 100% death in 90 seconds
what are tinctures?
effective against: 100% bacteria, fungi, and certain viruses time required for effectiveness: 10 minutes locations/uses: household surfaces; medical settings effect: microbicide; irreversible microbistat Formulations: sprays, liquids, gels, granules etc.
what is disinfectant effective against, required time for effectiveness, locations/uses, effect, and formulations?
effective against: 99.9% of bacteria Time required for effectiveness: 30 sec. -5 minutes Locations/uses: household and food contact surfaces Effect: limited microbicide Formulations: sprays, liquids, gels granules etc.
what is sanitizer effective against, required time for effectiveness, locations/uses, effect, and formulations?
effective against: 100% bacteria, fungi, viruses, spores time required for effectiveness: variable locations/uses: medical instruments; research supplies Effect: microbicide formulations: liquid, gases
what is sterilizer effective against, required time for effectiveness, locations/uses, effect, and formulations?
rapid acting: 10-30 minutes solubility/stability: H2O or alcohol not toxic to humans and animals persistent action: penetration of inanimate surfaces effectiveness: in presence of organic matter
what must one consider when selecting a microbicidal chemical?
epidemic
when statistics indicate that the prevalence of an endemic or sporadic disease is increasing beyond what is expected for a population