Create a table of the following Respiratory System diseases :
Tuberculosis
Scarlatina
Diphtheria
Pneumococcal Pneumonia
Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) Infection
Create columns as shown below:
Name of Disease | Causative Agent(s) | Virulence factors | Pathogenesis | Sequelae |
Create a table of the following Respiratory System diseases : Tuberculosis Scarlatina Diphtheria Pneumococcal Pneumonia Respiratory...
Create a table of the following Respiratory System diseases : Tuberculosis Scarlatina Diphtheria Pneumococcal Pneumonia Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) Infection Create columns as shown below: Name of Disease Causative Agent(s) Virulence factors Pathogenesis Sequelae
Create a table of the following skin diseases: Leptospirosis Pelvic Inflammatory diseases Gonorrhea Syphilis Genital herpes Create columns as shown below: Name of Disease Causative Agent(s) Virulence factors Pathogenesis Sequelae
Create a table of the following Cardiovascular and Systemic Diseases: 1. Malaria 2. Tularemia 3. Plague 4. Lyme disease 5. Cytomegalovirus Disease Create columns as shown below: Name of Disease Causative Agent(s) Virulence factors Pathogenesis Sequelae
cardiovascular chart Create a table of the following Cardiovascular and Systemic Diseases: 1. Malaria 2. Tularemia 3. Plague 4. Lyme disease 5. Cytomegalovirus Disease Create columns as shown below: Name Causative Virulence. of Pathogenesis Sequelae Disease Agent(s) factors
RESPIRATION 2 1. Which are the factors that affect diffusion of gases across the alveolar membrane? 2. Describe different respiratory units in terms of ventilation/perfusion ratio. 3. How are Oxygen and CO2 transported in blood? 4. What is physiological dead space? Know the formula for calculation alveolar ventilation rate. 5. Describe location of chemoreceptors. Which stimuli affect their activity? 6. Describe all lung receptors. What are the effects of sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system on respiration? OBSTRUCTIVE & RESTRICTIVE DISEASES...
DISEASES OF THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM (Chapter 21 con Tuberculosis, TB, Consumption 94.Pathogen: Symptoms: Patient may cough up blood because of a broken granuloma that once surrounded the infection. Granulomas are human cells that surround the infection and prevent its spread throughout the body. X-rays can confirm the presence of granulomas. Bacteria are slow growers and everyone must know you suspect TB. 95.Kingdom: - Legionnaires Disease 96.Pathogen= Symptoms: Pneumonia like symptoms distressed breathing fluid in lungs. Method of Transmission: Dirty Air...
Nester etal. MICROBIOLOGY: A Human Perspective Case Study – Chapter 21 Respiratory System Infectious A 65-year-old Hispanic man presented to his family physician with a fever (38.7 °C), a productive pink-colored cough, and chest pain which had persisted over 5 days. He had tested positive for TB when he was younger; however, he had never shown signs or symptoms of tuberculosis since then. He had taken no recent medications. He was a smoker and occasionally drank alcohol. He described to...
Case Study - Diseases of the Immune System. Peter was born after an uneventful pregnancy and weighed 3.1kg. At 3 months, he developed otitis media and an upper respiratory tract infection. At the ages of 5 months and 11 months, he was admitted to hospital with Hemophilus influenza pneumonia. The infections responded promptly to the appropriate antibiotics on each occasion. When 16 months old, he had a relapse of otitis media. He is the fourth child of unrelated parents: his...
Choose one of any of the following; Tuberculosis Malaria Zika Ebola Hepatitis B Dengue Genital Chlamydia 1. Describe the agent and its key characteristics. What is the agent? What are key characteristics of the agent that influence its transmission, virulence, and the ease/difficulty of prevention and control? Is there a vector or intermediate host? If so, what are the characteristics of the vector or intermediate host? 2 2. Describe the disease. What are its major manifestations? How does the disease...
A diagnostic sign of typical pneumonia is consolidation which A diagnostic sign of typical pneumonia is consolidation which is fluid rather than air in the alveoli and appears as a clear region on a chest X-ray. is a granuloma walling off infected phagocytes in the lungs. appears as a white or hazy opaque region on a chest X-ray is a granuloma walling off infected phagocytes in the lungs and appears as a clear region on a chest X-ray. is fluid...