Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Keeping healthy
B1.1
- Diet and exercise
- A balanced diet
contains the
correct amount of:
- Fats
Anmerkungen:
- Needed for: Energy and insulation
- Carbohydrates,
Anmerkungen:
- Needed for: Energy release.
- Proteins,
Anmerkungen:
- Needed for: Growth and repair.
- Vitamins
Anmerkungen:
- Needed for: Healthy teeth, bones, hair and nails
- Vitamin C
Anmerkungen:
- Found in: Citrus fruits
Needed for: Healthy skin, gums and immune system.
Deficiency syndrome: Scurvy- bleeding gums.
- Vitamin D
Anmerkungen:
- Found in: Exposure to sunlight for 20 minutes.
Needed for: Healthy bones
Deficiency syndrome: Rickets- bent/bow shaped legs.
- Fibre
Anmerkungen:
- Needed for: Keeping the digestive system working effieciently.
- Minerals
Anmerkungen:
- Needed for: Healthy blood and bones.
- Iron
Anmerkungen:
- Found in: Meat, Liver, Spinach
Needed for: Making red blood cells.
Deficiency syndrome: Anaemia, fatigue and pale white complexion.
- Calcium
Anmerkungen:
- Found in: Dairy products
Needed for: Making healthy bones and teeth.
Deficiency syndrome: Fragile or brittle bones and teeth.
- Water,
Anmerkungen:
- Needed for: Staying hydrated and for chemical reactions in cells.
- How much energy do
we need?
- The amount of energy you need
depends on lots things such as:
- Gender
Anmerkungen:
- Males need to take in more energy than females of the same age.
Pregnant women need to take in more energy than a non pregnant woman
- Age
Anmerkungen:
- A teenager will need more energy than elders.
- Exercise
Anmerkungen:
- The amount of exercise affects how much energy you need. If you exercise very little then you do not need much energy. The more exercise you do the more energy you need.
- Temperature
Anmerkungen:
- The temperature of where you live affects how much energy you need. The hotter the temperature, the less energy you need. The colder the temperature, the more energy you need because energy is also used to keep you warm.
- The metabolic
rate
- The metabolic rate depends
on things such as:
- Gender
Anmerkungen:
- Men generally have a higher metabolic rate than women. This is because men often have a higher muscle proportion than women.
- Exercise
Anmerkungen:
- The amount of exercise and activities you do will affect your metabolic rate. Exercise increases your metabolic rate even after you stop exercising.
- Temperature
Anmerkungen:
- If you work somewhere really cold, your metabolic rate will increase to keep you warm.
- Genetics
Anmerkungen:
- Basic metabolic rate may be affected by genetic factors you inherit from your parents.
- Obesity
- Health problems linked
with obesity:
- Arthritis
- Type 2 diabetes
- High blood
sugar levels
- Heart disease
- High blood
pressure
- Early death
- Fat
Anmerkungen:
- If you take in more energy than you
use, the excess is stored as fat. If
someone eats a lot more food than
they need, overtime they can become
overweight or even obese
- Losing weight
- You lose weight when the energy
content of your food is less than the
energy you use. There are three main
ways to losing weight:
- Reduce the amount of energy
you take in by eating less food
with high energy content.
- Increase the amount of
energy you use by
exercising more..
- Reduce your energy intake
and do more exercise.
- Lack of food
- Many people are underweight and
malnourished because there is not
enough food to eat.. Some reasons are:
- Civil wars
- Droughts
- Pests
- Cholesterol
- Cholesterol is needed for your cell membranes and
to make vital hormones. One form is healthy but
the other can cause health problems. If your
cholesterol levels are wrong, your chance of getting
heart disease increases.
- Liver.
Anmerkungen:
- Your liver deals with fat in your diet
and makes the different types of
cholesterol. Eating a balanced diet can
keep the cholesterol levels balanced
- Inheritance
Anmerkungen:
- Cholesterol is inherited from your parents and can affect how
the way your liver deals with fat and makes the different
types of cholesterol.
- Pathogens and diseases
- Pathogens
- Pathogens are micro-organisms which enter your
body and cause diseases. Some infectious diseases
are the common cold, tonsillitis and some are
deadly such as tetanus, influenza and HIV/Aids
- Ways pathogens enter your body:
- Direct contact
Anmerkungen:
- Some diseases are spread by direct contact of the skin. Some are spread by STDs.
- Contaminated
food and drink
Anmerkungen:
- Eating raw or under cooked food, or drinking water containing sewage can spread disease
- Infected droplets
Anmerkungen:
- Tiny droplets full of pathogens expel from your breathing system when you cough, sneeze or talk. Other people breathe in the droplets which contain the pathogens.
- Cut in the skin
Anmerkungen:
- Pathogens can enter your body through cuts, scratches and needle punctures.
- Bacteria
Anmerkungen:
- Bacteria are single-celled living organisms that are much smaller than animal and plant cells. Some bacteria cause diseases but many are harmless and useful. We use them to make food like yogurt and cheese, treat sewage and make diseases.
- Once bacteria enter your body, they reproduce rapidly by splitting into two and often produce toxins which affect your body. Sometimes they directly damage your body
- Viruses
Anmerkungen:
- Viruses are much smaller than bacteria. They cause diseases in every type of living organism, from people to bacteria.
- Once viruses enter your body, they reproduce rapidly and they take over the cells in your body as the reproduce, damaging and destroying the cells.
- Ignaz Semmelweis
- Ignaz Semmelweis was a doctor in the mid
1850s. At the time many women in hospital
died from childbirth fever a few days after
giving birth.
Anmerkungen:
- Semmelweis noticed that medical students went straight from dissecting a dead body to delivering a baby without washing their hand. Another doctor cut himself while working on a body and died from symptoms which were identical to childbed fever. Semmelweis told his medical students to wash their hand before delivering babies and immediately fewer mother died from the fever.
- Today in hospitals bacteria such as MRSA which
are resisitant to antibiotics are causing a lot of
problems. Getting doctors, nurses and visitors to
wash their hands is now always done.
- How does our body prevent
pathogens from entering our body?
- Skin
Anmerkungen:
- Our skin covers our body to prevent pathogens reaching the tissues beneath from getting infected
- Scabs
Anmerkungen:
- When we damage or cut our skin, we bleed. Plasma which is in the blood forms a clot and dries into a scab which seals the cut.
- Mucus
Anmerkungen:
- Mucus is a sticky liquid. It covers the lining of out lungs and tubes. It traps the pathogen then removes it.
- Tears
Anmerkungen:
- Tears contain a enzyme called lysozyme. This enzyme destroys bacteria and also protects the body from infection by constantly flowing, flushing out the eye and preventing entry of these organisims into the body.
- White blood cells
- White blood cells are blood cells which
are involved in the immune system.
- How do white blood cells protect
us from disease?
- Ingesting microorganisms
Anmerkungen:
- Some white blood cells ingest pathogens which destroys them so they can't make you ill.
- Producing antibodies
Anmerkungen:
- Some white blood cells make special chemicals called antibodies. These target a paticular pathogen and destroy the. You have a unique antibody for each type of pathogen. Once your white blood cell have produced antibodies against the certain pathogen, it can quickly detect the pathogen and destroy it if it enters the body again.
- Producing antitoxins
Anmerkungen:
- Some white blood cells produce antitoxins. These cancel out toxins released by pathogens.
- Using drugs to
treat diseases
- Medicine which contain useful drugs such as
aspirin and paracetamol can be used as painkillers.
They'll help relieve pain but have no effect on the
pathogen and will not help to cure you.
- These over the counter drugs can be found
at a chemist's or supermarket.
- Antibiotics
- As painkillers do not cure us, we use antibiotics
to treat infectious diseases.. These medicines
work to kill bacteria that cause diseases.
- How antibiotics work:
- Antibiotics work by damaging the
bacterial cells without harming your
own cells.
- Although antibiotics kill bacteria, it can NOT kill
viruses. This is because viruses reproduce inside
the cells o your body meaning it would kill the
virus and your cells!
- Antibiotic-resistant bacteria
- Antibiotics kill bacteria that has made you ill. But some
bacteria have a natural mutation and don't get affected by the
antibiotics. The resistant bacteria reproduce so the population
increases.
- This makes the antibiotic useless and these
antibiotic-resistant bacteria can spread easily
because people are not immune to it and there is no
effective treatment such as MRSA.
- Vaccination
- Vaccines are used for protection from future
diseases. They are made up of dead of inactive cells
of a certain pathogen.
- How vaccinations work:
- The dead or inactive cell of a certain cell is injected.
Then white blood cells produce antibodies to destroy
the pathogen. When the actual pathogen enters,
white blood cells detect the pathogen and kill it.
- Growing and investigating bacteria
- When culturing microorganisms you must provide
them with everything they need. Giving them liquid
or gel containing nutrients. Most micro-organisms
also need warmth and oxygen to grow.
- Great care must be taken when culturing
microorganisms. The bacteria you want to grow may
be harmless but there is always a risk of a mutation
which could produce a new dangerous pathogen.
- To make sure that uncontaminated
cultures do not get contaminated
investigations are taken in place:
- Petri dishes and culture
media must be sterilised.
- Inoculating loops used to transfer
microorganisms must be sterilised
by passing them through a flame.
- The lid of the petri dish should be
secured with adhesive tape to prevent
microorganisms getting contaminated
by the air.
- In school and college laboratories,
cultures are incubated no more than
25°C because it reduces the likelihood
that you will grow harmful pathogens.
- In industrial conditions bacterial
cultures are often grown at height
temperatures which allot the
micro-organisms to grow more rapidly.