This lesson contains 23 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.
Lesson duration is: 60 min
Items in this lesson
Pathogens
Bacteria: - no nucleus - cell wall
Virus: - parasites - protein coat with RNA/DNA
Fungi: - hyphae - spores
Slide 1 - Slide
Disease causing microorganisms are called:
A
pathogen
B
antigen
C
vector
D
antibodies
Slide 2 - Quiz
Bacteria cause disease by:
A
becoming part of a cell's DNA
B
decomposing dead organic matter
C
releasing toxins or breaking down cells
D
carrying viruses into healthy tissues
Slide 3 - Quiz
Spreading of pathogens
Can be through air/water/food etc.
If it is through touch we call it contagious
Can be through other organisms, we call them vectors
Slide 4 - Slide
Spreading fast through population = epidemic
Pandemic= when an epidemic spreads over a wide area, like continent of entire world.
Slide 5 - Slide
First line of defense
barriers
Slide 6 - Slide
The first line of disease against potential diseases is the:
A
skin
B
B cells
C
white blood cells
D
antibodies
Slide 7 - Quiz
Second line of defense
Aspecific: will attack anything foreign to the body, from bacteria to dust to splinters
White blood cells: phagocytes will try to 'eat' the foreign bodies
Can cause inflammation (red and swelling) and fever
Slide 8 - Slide
The non specific defense that results in redness and some swelling is called:
A
inflammation
B
clotting
C
phagocytosis
D
vaccination
Slide 9 - Quiz
A molecule found on the outer surface of cells that the immune system recognises as either part of the body or an outside invader.
A
Aids
B
Antigen
C
Antibodies
D
Disease
Slide 10 - Quiz
Third line of defense
Specific: will adapt to the specific antigens of the pathogen
White blood cells: lymphocytes
Lymphocytes: - T cells - B cells
Slide 11 - Slide
T cells: - Cytotoxic t cells break through cell membranes/cell walls of pathogen - T helper cells activate B cells
B cells: - Plasma cells produce antibodies - Memory cells remember which antibody fits which antigen for future encounters
Slide 12 - Slide
Antibodies connect to the antigen they fit on. As a result, antibodies cover the outside of the pathogen. This makes it a lot easier for phagocytes to consume the pathogen
Slide 13 - Slide
Produced in the bone marrow, part of these cells are memory cells
A
killer T cells
B
phagocytes
C
B cells
D
platelets
Slide 14 - Quiz
Which type of cell releases antibodies?
A
Red blood cells
B
Phagocytes
C
Platelets
D
Lymphocytes
Slide 15 - Quiz
Slide 16 - Slide
A Substance made of weakened, killed, or partial pathogens are designed to protect the body from future invasions of that pathogen.
A
Vaccine
B
Virus
C
Disease
D
Microbe
Slide 17 - Quiz
Maarten has had mumps disease as a child and will therefore not get it again
A
Passive natural immunity
B
Passive artificial immunity
C
Active natural immunity
D
Active artificial immunity
Slide 18 - Quiz
The embryo receives antibodies from the blood of the mother through the placenta
A
Passive natural immunity
B
Passive artificial immunity
C
Active natural immunity
D
Active artificial immunity
Slide 19 - Quiz
How to recognize?
Passive: no memory cells produced
Active: body created antibodies and memory cells
Artificial: injection
Slide 20 - Slide
Antibiotics
Naturally produced by fungi to defend against bacteria
Does not work on viruses! only on bacteria
Different antibiotics work in different ways, but a lot work by breaking the cell wall of the bacteria
Slide 21 - Slide
Antibiotics only help fight of these types of infections.
A
viruses
B
bacterial
C
malarial
D
fungal
Slide 22 - Quiz
Clinical trials
Testing of new medicine or technique to check if it is more effective than the current method
Beware of the placebo effect: the psychological effect of believing in the treatment. The power of the mind
You prevent this by making sure people don't know if they get the real or fake drug. To make it even more reliable also the doctor helping the patients shouldn't know