Ch. 13 Pt 1
Ch. 13 Pt 2
Ch. 14 Pt 1
Ch. 14 Pt 2
100

What are viruses?

acellular, obligate intracellular parasites

100

What are viroids

naked RNA molecules - lack a capsid; infect plants

100

Define eitology

Cause of disease

100

What is a reservoir of infection?

Source of microbes

200

Which of the RNA viruses can serve directly as mRNA?

+ RNA virus

200

What are prions and what do they lack?

Prions are proteins that infect animals; they lack nucleic acid

200

Explain the difference between signs and symptoms and give an example for both.

Symptoms are subjective: headache, dry throat

Signs are objective: fever, rash, swelling

200

What are the 3 type of transmission of disease?

Contact, vector, and vehicle

300

What is viral taxonomy and how is it classified?

A viral species is a group of viruses sharing the same genetic information and host range; classified based on genome type and presence or lack of an envelope

300

Where does viral assembly occur in DNA and RNA viruses?

dna viral assemblies in the nucleus while rna is outside the nucleus

300

What is herd immunity? What is it caused by?

Immune individuals act as barriers to the spread of infection. Caused by the use of vaccinations

300

What is the difference between morbidity and mortality? Which one should ALWAYS be higher?

Morbidity: incidence of disease

Mortality: deaths from disease

Morbidity should ALWAYS be higher

400

What are the different bacteriophage life cycles and explain them

lytic cycle: phage quickly replicates killing host cell 

lysogenic cycle: does not necessarily kill the host immediately, can we reactivate to become Lytic based on environmental cues, integrates into cell chromosome as prophage

400

Persistent vs latent viruses

latent viral infections is a virus that infects host cell, but does not cause disease and can remain endurance state for long periods

persistent viral infection occurs gradually over a long period of time

Viruses are continuously released

400

What is the infection classification called if I had an infection on the tip of my finger and it spread to the rest of my hand?

Focal infection

400

What are EID's? What are the criteria to identify EID's?

EID's are emerging infectious diseases. 

Criteria:

- distinctive disease symptoms

-improved diagnostic techniques allow ID of pathogen

-local disease becomes widespread

-rare disease becomes common

-mild disease becomes more severe

500

Explain the process of the viral life cycle

host recognition and attachment, genome entry, synthesis, and virion assembly, exit and transmission

500

Explain the animal virus life cycle

attachment, entry, uncoating

500

Explain all the phases of the development of disease and which phase would an opportunistic pathogen be able to enter the body

1. Incubation

2. Prodromal

3. Period of illness

4. Period of decline

5. Period of convalescence 

500

What are HAI’s? What are different interactions that can cause transmission? What are the levels of precautions?

Healthcare Associated Infections