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Definition
Caused by Brucellosis, a major ungulate pathogen (in goats, sheep, and cattle)
It causes chills and fever, alternating daily for months |
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Term
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Definition
Brucellosis can be transmitted via the placenta and testes
Through the testes it can be transmitted via semen from wild to domestic or via pasture contamination from the placenta making it spread quickly throughout the herd when they eat the grass
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Term
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Definition
The dog version of Brucellosis
10% of strays infected
It can take out an entire kennel |
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Term
Graulomatosis Infantispetica |
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Definition
When Listeria monocytogenes infects the placenta causing a stillbirth |
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Definition
The neurotransmitter that signals muscle contraction |
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Definition
Botulism prevents ACh release causing flaccid muscle paralysis
The infant kind is refered to as "Floppy Baby"
They get it from honey (Clostridium botulinum can stay on the can if it isn't sterilized properly) because they don't have any native flora to fight off the bacteria |
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Definition
Botulism caused by drug injection
Botulism caused by Clostridium botulinum
Like the "Botox" parties (fine in low concentrations, but can be deadly if it isn't just right) |
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Term
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Definition
Toxin that causes flaccind muscle paralysis from Clostridium botulinum |
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Term
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Definition
Virus that causes mono
Transmitted via saliva
In the herpesvirus family |
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Term
Heterophile Antibody Test = MonoSpot Test |
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Definition
The test for mono
Tests for random antibodies produced by the body
See if the patient's serum agglutinates ox RBCs (a random animal antigen) |
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Definition
Inflammation of the brain
Most the cases are transmitted via mosquito bites (can't spread human to human)
Caused by flavivirus (St. Louis and W. Nile encephalitis) |
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Term
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Definition
When a host gets infected with a virus, but because it has low levels of viremia it cannot be transmitted to other hosts of the same species
Like West Nile where it can be transferred to humans through mosquites, but humans cannot spread it to one another |
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Term
Retrograde Axonal Transport |
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Definition
This is what Rabes does
The virus replicates most rapidly in the CNS so they get there via axonal transport in the opposite direction (Axon --> Cell Body) |
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Term
Anterograde Axonal Transport |
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Definition
This happens in rabies
When the virus is able to replicate in the CNS it can spread via this mechanism to the salivary glands and cornea |
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Term
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Definition
Often this IgG is given passively to patients infected with rabes in addition to the vaccine
(The vaccine works after exposure because it can take a long time before the virus replicates and causes problems) |
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Term
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Definition
This is what the rabes virus, rhabdovirus, produces in the CNS
A characteristic of rabies |
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Term
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Definition
The causative agent of Malaria
It is a sporozoan
There are 4 species of this |
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Term
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Definition
This is what infects humans from mosquitos to cause malaria |
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Term
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Definition
When the sporozoite migrates to liver and the liver cells produces merozoites by schizogony |
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Term
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Definition
This the first thing that is produced when the merozoites infect RBCs
Involved with Malaria |
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Term
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Definition
This is what forms after the ring forms form in the RBC
For Malaria |
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Term
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Definition
This is what forms after the trophozoite forms in the RBC (will form merozoite again, so it can enter new RBCs and lyse them)
Associated with Malaria |
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Term
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Definition
After merozoites from the liver enter the RBC they will then enter this |
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Term
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Definition
When the gametes of the mosquitos come together and form this
In gut wall |
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Term
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Definition
The next thing the zygote of the mosquito develops into
In gut wall |
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Term
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Definition
The next thing the ookinate develops into
In mosquitos/Malaria
In gut wall |
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Term
Quinine/ Chloroquine/ Primoquine |
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Definition
The drugs used to try to treat Malaria, but none of them kill the early ring cells |
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Term
artemisinin combined therapy (ACT) |
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Definition
A treatment used to kill early ring cells for Malaria
Costly treatment |
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Term
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Definition
The developing vaccine for Malaria |
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