This is the type of cell that bacteria are.
What is prokaryotes / prokaryotic?
This is an example of a viral illness.
What is a cold,the flu, HIV, Ebola, Zika, etc.?
You can show Ms. Parsons your answer if you don't see it here.
This is the part of your blood that is part of your immune system.
What are white blood cells?
This is an example of a vaccine.
What is flu shot, chicken pox, measles, mumps, rubella, rabies, polio, small pox, meningitis, HPV, tetanus, etc.?
You can check you answer with Ms. Parsons if you do not see it here.
This is the term for "zero" in tennis.
What is "love?"
This is the name of this bacteria:
Bacillus
This is what viruses need in order to reproduce.
What is a host cell?
This is the white blood cell the sounds the alarm when a pathogen invades your body and activates the other white blood cells.
What is the Helper T?
This is the term that refers to the body's ability to fight pathogens BEFORE they can make you sick.
What is immune / immunity?
This is where the smallest bone in the human body is located.
The ear.
This is the name of this bacteria:
Staphylococcus
This is the term for a medicine you take when you get a viral illness that slows down the replication of the virus.
What is an antiviral?
These are the proteins produced by plasma B cells to mark pathogens for destruction.
What are antibodies?
This is the reason why you have to get a flu shot every year.
What is the flu virus can change / mutate?
This is the animal with the highest blood pressure.
What is a giraffe?
(Blood has to be pumped hard enough to make it all the way up that long neck!)
This is three ways that bacteria help us.
What is help plants grow, help us digest food, help kill bad bacteria, help break down waste, etc.?
You can show Ms. Parsons if your answer does not appear here.
These are the two main parts of a virus.
What are protein shell/coat and DNA/RNA/genetic material?
These are three examples of general (first line) defenses in your immune system.
What is skin, enzymes in your tears, stomach acid, mucus and cilia in your nose, cilia in your trachea, good bacteria in your body,etc.?
You can show your answer to Ms. Parsons if you do not see it here.
This is the type of immunity you have if you get a vaccine with the antibodies it in.
What is passive immunity?
This is the location of uvula.
What is in the back of your mouth/throat?
This is the term for bacteria that cannot be killed by antibiotics.
What is antibiotic resistant bacteria (antibiotic resistance)?
These are three differences between bacteria and viruses.
What are...
Living vs. Nonliving
Asexual Reproduction vs. Lytic Cycle
Antibiotics vs. Vaccines / Antivirals
You can show your answer to Ms. Parsons if you don't see it here.
This is the difference between the job of a phagocyte and the job of a killer T cell.
What is phagocytes eat/kill pathogens, while killer T cells kill infected cells?
These are three different ways to make a vaccine.
What is...
1. Live, but weakened pathogen
2. Deactivated (dead) pathogen
3. Piece of a pathogen
4. Pathogen toxins
5. Mimic (similar pathogen)
This is the term for a group of crows.
What is a murder?