Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Biology 1-
Keeping Healthy 2
- Pathogens and disease
- Pathogens are
microorganisms that
cause disease
- Pathogens reproduce
rapidly inside the human
body and produce toxins
- This makes them hard to destroy
- Most pathogens are
either bacteria or viruses
- Viruses reproduce inside
human cells and damage them
- The damage to cells
makes you feel ill
- Viruses are much
smaller than bacteria
- Washing hands removes
pathogens from them
- Semmelweiss was the
first doctor to realise this
- Doctors then didn't take him seriously
- Defence mechanisms
- The body prevents
most pathogens from
getting into the body
- Through skin
- Through mucus
- Through stomach acid
- Pathogens which enter the
body can be destroyed by
white blood cells
- White blood cells...
- ...ingest pathogens
(digest and destroy
them)
- ...produce antibodies which
attach to particular
pathogens and destroy them
- ...produce antitoxins to
counteract the toxins
that pathogens produce
- White blood cells are part
of the immune system
- The immune system is a body
system which recognises and
destroys foreign cells or proteins
such as invading pathogens
- Using drugs to treat disease
- Pain killers are medicines that
relieve symptoms of a disease
but don't kill the pathogen
- Antibiotics cure bacterial diseases by killing bacteria
- They can't kill viruses
- Growing and investigating bacteria
- Bacteria can be
grown on agar jelly
- All the materials and equipment must be
sterilised- this ensures that unwanted
microorganisms do not infect the culture
- Uncontaminated cultures can be used
to investigate the effects of antibiotics
and disinfectants on the bacteria
- Immunity
- Dead or inactive forms of a disease
are injected into a person's body
- White blood cells react
by producing antibodies
- The antibodies recognise
the antigen on the pathogen
- This makes the person immune
- It prevents further infection
as the body responds quickly
by producing more antibodies
- The MMR vaccine
is one of several- it
prevents measles,
mumps and rubella
- Vaccines protect against
bacterial and viral pathogens
- Changing pathogens
- If a pathogen changes
by mutation the new
strain may spread rapidly
- Some new strains can cause
epidemics and pandemics
- Some bacteria have
developed resistance to
antibiotics by natural selection
- Random mutations of pathogens produce new
strains- some strains are resistant to antibiotics
- Antibiotics kill individual pathogens
of the non-resistant strain
- The resistant bacteria survive and
reproduce a whole population of
resistant strains- natural selection
- Antibiotics should not be used for mild
infections in order to slow down the
rate of development of resistant strains
- How do we deal with disease?
- Vaccination protects
individuals and society
from the effects of disease
- The treatment of disease
has changed as our
understanding of antibiotics
and immunity has increased