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Digestion in the small intestines |
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Definition
Enzymatic digestion, absorption of nutrients occurs through microvilli |
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Digestion in large intestines |
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Definition
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Term
Normal flora of the GI tract |
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Definition
Highest number of microbes in the large intestines Feces is 50-60% bacteria by weight |
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Term
Normal flora make-up: Aerobic bacteria |
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Definition
-E. coli, Enterococcus -Coliform: a general term referring to E. Coli and related bacteria |
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Normal flora make-up: Anaerobic bacteria |
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Definition
-Bacterioides, Clostridium -Grow in low O2 environments -Anaerobic out number E. coli ~ 1000 to 1 |
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Term
The purpose of flora in the GI tract |
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Definition
-aid in digestion -Secretion of vitamins -Stimulates development of immune tissues -prevent colonization with pathogenic microbes |
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Definition
inflammation of the GI tract |
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Term
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Definition
can result in loss of salt/water balance in the blood DEHYDRATION |
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Term
Common transmission of diarrhea |
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Definition
-Unclean food -Excretions from sick or infected humans or animals -Polluted water -Unwashed meat |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-Refers to distinct variations within a subspecies of bacteria or viruses -classified together based on their cell surface antigen -test for recognition by antibody to specific antigen |
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Definition
has enterotoxin, travelers diarrhea |
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Term
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Definition
Invades through intestinal epithelium, bodily diarrhea |
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Definition
no toxin, no invasion, hospital infantile diarrhea |
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Term
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Definition
Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), kidney failure |
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Term
E. Coli O157:H7 outbreaks |
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Definition
Hamburgers- jack in the box Spinach recall Ground beef Gouda cheese |
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Term
Transmission of E. coli O157:H7 |
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Definition
-20-40% of cattle may carry it asymptomaticaly in their intestines -transmission by beef contaminated with intestine contents |
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Term
Pulse field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) |
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Definition
A way to trace the source of an epidemic -Comparing the patterns of DNA bands in isolates from outbreak cases to those from environmental isolates to determine the source of contamination |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-Causes epidemis cholera -Ingestion of contaminated food/water -Bacteria produce toxin -toxin disrupts salt/water balance in intestinal tract |
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Term
Symptoms of Cholera disease |
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Definition
Severe diarrhea, dehydration, vomiting, shock patients develop immunity but die before it may be helpful due to severe dehydration |
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Term
What blood type is most susceptible to Cholera? |
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Definition
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Term
What blood type is least susceptible to cholera? |
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Definition
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Term
People with Cystic fibrosis mutation may be ______ susceptible to cholera |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-Supportive care -Oral rehydration therapy Antibiotics do not work quickly enough |
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Term
Most recent outbreaks of cholera are in |
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Definition
Zimbabwe 09 Haiti 10 Nigeria and Cameroon 10 |
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Term
What caused the outbreak of cholera in Haiti |
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Definition
Sanitation problems after hurrican over 150.000 cases death toll 1.000 |
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Term
Nigeria and Cameroon Cholera outbreak |
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Definition
Deaths = over 1500 in Nigeria, hundreds in Cameroon Sick = over 40,000 in Nigeria |
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Term
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Definition
Vaccine 3 types killed attenuated recombinant DNA |
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Term
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Definition
Gram negative bacteria >200 species, 1600 stereotypes Few cause disease -Many are zoonotic- non-human carriers Environmental-carried by turtles and other reptiles |
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Definition
Acute intestinal disease -diarrhea -abdominal cramps -vomitting lasts 3-7 days TYPHOID FEVER most severe |
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Definition
Eggs become contaminated by contact with feces- surface of shell -Bacteria can penetrate shell and contaminate yolk |
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Term
Salmonella typhi-typhoid fever |
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Definition
-human-specific -special virulence factor and capsule -Symptoms: gastroenteritis, undulating fever, rash -Complications can be fatal |
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Term
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Definition
-Vaccines available Live attenuated vaccine (oral) Subunit vaccine (injected) |
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Definition
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Definition
Humans are the only significant reservoir -Some strains produce a toxin |
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Definition
Severe disease when microbe penetrates intestinal wall and invades surrounding tissue ->blood and mucus present in feces |
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Definition
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Definition
Important cause of food borne illness in developed world -Associated with raw chicken -Diarrhea, abdominal pain, dysentery |
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Definition
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Definition
-Anaerobic, spore forming bacteria Associated with depletion of normal flora TOXIN can cause disease- gastroenteritis with abdominal pain |
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Definition
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-Ubiquitous (everywhere) in the environment -Gastroenteritis, nausea, diarrhea -Intestinal infection that can go systemic (CNS) |
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Listeria is cold enhancement |
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Definition
bacteria grows at refrigerator temperature |
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Term
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Definition
-Infection during pregnancy can have serious problems for the mother and fetus -miscarriage -prematurity -meningitis -pregnant woman are 20x more likely to develop intestinal infection than non-pregnant |
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Term
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Definition
Source: contaminated food processing plants in Ontario -Deli meat recalls -53 cases, 20 death |
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Definition
Buffalo, NY- Wal mart deli meat Texas- food processing, 4 deaths |
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Term
Diagnosis of bacterial infections |
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Definition
-Normal flora may greatly outnumber pathogenic species -Culture -Biochemical tests: series of reactions that help identify specific pathogens -Serotyping: Determine antigens -Molecular techniques |
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Term
Treatment of Bacterial Infections |
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Definition
-Supportive treatment is key Fluid/salt replacement anti-diarrheals -Antibiotic therapies Sulfa drugs, cipro frequently too late or too little resistance can occur and spread |
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Definition
viral intestinal pathogen |
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Term
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Definition
-Most common cause of diarrhea in children -dsRNA virus -Seasonal -Estimated 500,000 deaths annually worldwide |
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Definition
First vaccine was recalled 2006 Merck live attenuated vaccine (oral) released reduced hospitalization by 80% |
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Term
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Definition
VERY infectious -Aerosolized by vomiting -Within 24 hours of contracting virus acute, self-limiting disease develops diarrhea, nausea, vomitting |
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Term
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Definition
ssRNA virues -Frequent outbreaks-institutions -2009 |
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Term
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Definition
-Often made by history and symptoms -Usually only diagnosed as an outbreak -Test for viral antigens in feces (ELISA) -treatment is mostly supportive |
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Term
Viruses that infect GI tract but don't cause diarrhea |
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Definition
-Hepatitis A/E -Polovirus -Adenovirus (lung infections) -Enteroviruses (rhinoviruses, polio) |
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