They replicate themselves by
invading your cells and using the cells
machinery to produce many copies of
themselves
The cell will usually then burst releasing all the new viruses
This cell damage is what makes you feel ill
cause infectious disease
Fighting disease
Sophisticated defence system
Your skin, plus hairs and mucus in your
respiratory tract (breathing pipework)
stop a lot of microorganisms getting
inside your body
Try to prevent microorganisms getting into the
body through cuts, small fragments of cells
(platelets) help blood clot quickly to seal wounds. If
the blood contains low numbers of platelets then it
will clot more slowly
If something does make it through, your immune system kicks in. The most important part is
the white blood cells. They travel around in your blood and crawl into every pare of you,
constantly patrolling for microbes. When they come across an invading microbe they have
three lines of attack
Consuming them
White blood cells can engulf foreign cells and digest them
Producing Antibodies
Every invading cell has unique molecules (antigens) on its surface
When the white blood cells come across a
foreign antigen (one it doesnt recognise) they
will start to produce proteins called antibodies
to lock on to and kill the invading cells. The
antibodies produced are specific to that type
of antigen they wont lock on to any others
Antibodies are then produced
rapidly and carried around the body
to kill all similar bacteria or viruses
If the person is infected with the same pathogen
again the white blood cells will rapidly produce the
antibodies to kill it the person is naturally immune to
that pathogen and wont get ill
Producing Antitoxins
These counter toxins produced by the invading bacteria
Fighting disease - vaccination
Protects from future infection
When your infected with a new
microorganism it takes your white
blood cells a few days to learn how to
deal with it
Vaccinations involve injecting small amounts of dead
or denatured microorganisms. These carry antigens
which cause your body to produce antibodies to attack
them even though the microorganism is harmless
But if live microorganisms of the same type
appear after that, the white blood cells can
rapidly mass produce antibodies to kill off the
pathogen
Some vaccinations wear off over time
so booster injections may need to be
given to increase levels of antibodies
Pros
They help control lots of infectious
diseases that were once common in the
UK. Smallpox no longer occurs at all and
polio infections have fallen by 99%
Big outbreaks of disease (epidemics) can be prevented if a large
percentage of the population is vaccinated. That way even the
people who arent vaccinated are unlikely to catch the disease
because there are fewer people able to pass it on
Cons
Vaccines dont always work-they sometimes done give you immunity
You can sometimes have a bad reaction to a vaccine e.g. swelling but there very rare
Fighting disease - drugs
Some drugs just relieve symptoms others cure the disease
Painkillers (aspirin) just relieve pain however they
dont actually tackle the cause of the
disease they just reduce the symptoms
Antibiotics (penicillin) work differently they kill (or
prevent growth of) the bacteria causing the
problem without killing you own body cells.
Different antibiotics kill different types of bacteria
so its important to be treated with the right one
dont destroy viruses. Viruses reproduce using your own body
cells which makes it very difficult to develop drugs that destroy
just the virus without killing the bodys cells
Bacteria can become resistant to antibiotics
Bacteria can mutate - sometimes the
mutations cause them to be resistant to (not
killed by) an antibiotic
If you have an infection some of the bacteria might be resistant to antibiotics
only non resistant bacteria will be killed
The individual resistant bacteria will survive
and reproduce and the population of the
resistant strain will increase
Resistant strains could cause a
serious infection that cant be
treated by antibiotics
To slow down the rate of
development of resistant strains
its important not to over
prescribe drugs
super bugs
Investigate antibiotics by growing microorganisms
Microorganisms are grown (cultured) in a
"culture medium". This is usually agar jelly
containing carbohydrates, minerals, proteins
and vitamins they need to grow
Hot agar jelly is poured into
shallow round plastic dishes
called petri dishes
When the jellys cooled and set inoculating
loops (wire loops) are used to transfer
microorganisms to the culture medium
Paper discs are soaked in different types of antibiotics and
places on the jelly. Antibiotic resistant bacteria will continue to
grow around them but non resistant strains will die
Equipment is sterilised to
prevent contamination
if it isnt the unwanted
microorganisms in the
culture medium will grow and
affect the result
The temperature must be
kept fairly low in school labs
Harmful pathogens are unlikely to grow at this temperature
Fighting disease - past and future
Ignaz Semmelweis believed
doctors were spreading the
disease on their unwashed
hands. By telling doctors entering
his ward to wash their hands in
antiseptic solution he cut the
death rate from 12% to 25
The solution killed the bacteria but he
couldnt prove it so his methods were dropped
when he left the hospital
Bacteria and viruses are pretty
fast at evolving to deal with threats
Bacteria
Bacteria can mutate for new strains
New strain that no one has encountered before
Spread rapidly in a population
Viruses
Mutate often
hard to develop
vaccines
deadly and very infectious
Worst case scenario a flu
pandemic could kill billions
of people all over the world
A pandemic is when a disease spreads all over the world