Medical interventions final

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/159

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

160 Terms

1
New cards

What is a medical intervention?

Any measure whose purpose is to improve health or alter the course of a disease

2
New cards

What are the main categories of interventions that function to maintain human health?

Treatments, Diagnostics and Equipment

3
New cards

How do scientists gather evidence during the potential outbreak of an infectious disease?

  1. Record patient's symptoms and find similarities with other patients

4
New cards
  1. Isolate the bacteria in a lab

5
New cards
  1. Go to affected areas and determine the origin of the disease

6
New cards
  1. Identify the disease using DNA sequencing since pathogens alter certain DNA sequences

7
New cards

What is bioinformatics?

The collection, classification, storage, and analysis of biochemical and biological information using computers. (Especially applied in molecular genetics and genomics)

8
New cards

How can DNA sequences be used to identify disease pathogens?

You can observe mutations and abnormalities that disease pathogens have

9
New cards

What is an antibody?

A blood protein in the body produced by B-cells (B-Lymphocytes) that fight against a foreign substance by recognizing a specific part of it.

10
New cards

How do antibodies identify and inactivate antigens?

  1. Shape recognition

11
New cards
  1. Proteins of the antigens are configured to specific antibodies, so the foreign antigens bind to the specific antibodies that inactivate them

12
New cards

How can the ELISA assay be used to detect disease?

  1. Primary antibodies attach to specific antigen

13
New cards
  1. Secondary antibody attaches to primary antibody

14
New cards
  1. When enzyme substrate is added, color change occurs

15
New cards

Why is it important for doctors to know the concentration of the disease antigen present in a patient's system?

Higher concentration = closer to patient zero

16
New cards

Patient Zero

The first person to be infected with a particular disease

17
New cards

What steps do scientists take to diagnose, treat, and prevent future spread of a disease outbreak?

  1. Record the symptoms

18
New cards
  1. Locate the origin of the pathogen

19
New cards
  1. Run tests to determine antibodies and antigens

20
New cards
  1. Take preventative measures (quarantine, wash hands often, etc.)

21
New cards

How were the following used in managing the outbreak on Sue Smith's campus:

22
New cards

PCR, Bioinformatics/BLAST, and ELISA?

These tests determine the concentration of the disease, which lead to the source of the outbreak

23
New cards

Which part of the bacterial cell allows the bacteria to attach to specific surfaces?

Adhesins, or cell-surface components/appendages of the bacteria that facilitate attachment to other cells or surfaces

24
New cards

Which bacterial structure is involved with protein synthesis?

rRNA, tRNA, and mRNA (Ribosomal, Transfer, Messenger)

25
New cards

What is an endotoxin?

A toxin that is inherently present inside a bacterial cell

26
New cards

What is the structural difference between Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria?

Gram positive:

27
New cards

•Purple

28
New cards

•Thick cell wall

29
New cards

Gram negative:

30
New cards

•Pink

31
New cards

•Thin cell wall

32
New cards

How do antibiotics work to fight bacteria?

•Inhibit the cell wall

33
New cards

•Stop bacteria from reproducing/sharing resistant DNA

34
New cards

Penicillin

An antibiotic that penetrates and destroys the cell wall of gram negative bacteria

35
New cards

Tetracycline

An antibiotic that inhibits protein synthesis (reproduction) of mostly gram positive, but some gram negative bacteria

36
New cards

Fluoroquinolones

An antibiotic that inhibits the DNA gyrase of gram negative bacteria

37
New cards

Sulfa Antibiotics

An antibiotic that inhibits folic acid synthesis and growth of gram positive and negative bacteria

38
New cards

Folic Acid

Vitamin that helps the organism produce and maintain healthy cells

39
New cards

Efflux

Transport of a solute molecule from the inside to the outside of a cell

40
New cards

Destruction/Inactivation

Exchange enzymes that chemically degrade the antibiotic (How some bacteria develop resistance to antibiotics)

41
New cards

Mutation

A change in a gene or chromosome.

42
New cards

Explain the difference between limited spectrum and broad spectrum antibiotics.

Limited spectrum: only kills the cells that are infected.

43
New cards

Broad spectrum: kills all cells, even healthy cells.

44
New cards

What methods do bacteria use to share antibiotic resistant genes? Explain the difference between conjugation, transformation, and transduction.

Conjugation - The one-way transfer of DNA between bacteria in cellular contact.

45
New cards
46
New cards

Transformation -The genetic modification of a bacterium by incorporation of free-floating DNA from another ruptured bacterial cell.

47
New cards
48
New cards

Transduction - The transfer of genetic material from one organism (such as bacteria) to another by a genetic vector.

49
New cards

What is the difference between the chromosomal DNA and plasmid DNA when thinking about antibiotic resistance?

Bacteria possess a single chromosome composed of double‐stranded DNA in a loop. The genetic information of the plasmid is usually not essential to survival of the host bacteria. Plasmids can be removed from the host cell and the bacteria can still survive.

50
New cards

What is the best antibiotic to use when treating a Gram-positive bacterial disease?

Flouroquinolones or Tetracyclines

51
New cards

How would you determine which strain of Streptococcus aureus had a plasmid for resistance to streptomycin?

Performing a Disc Diffusion test

52
New cards

What actions are humans taking that are contributing to bacteria becoming resistance to commonly used antibiotics?

  1. Preserving the potency of antibiotics

53
New cards
  1. Taking the full dosage of antibiotics without missing one

54
New cards

What are the health impacts if you do not take your complete course of antibiotics that have been prescribed for your illness?

The disease will come back, and for an even longer period of time

55
New cards

Why are antibiotics ineffective against viral diseases?

Antibiotics are designed for bacteria, not viruses

56
New cards

How do frequency and amplitude affect how humans interpret sound?

F - pitch/tone

57
New cards

A - loudness/volume

58
New cards

What causes different types of hearing loss?

  1. Sensorineural - Hearing loss or impairment resulting from problems with the auditory nerves

59
New cards
60
New cards
  1. Conductive - Hearing loss or impairment resulting from interference or blockage of the transmission of sound waves to the cochlea.

61
New cards

How is hearing loss diagnosed?

Performing an Audiogram

62
New cards

Describe the difference between sensorineural hearing loss and conductive hearing loss.

Cochlear vs. auditory nerves

63
New cards

If you listen to very loud music, non-treatable hearing loss may result. The damage involves what structure of the ear?

Cochlea hairs

64
New cards

What part of the ear converts stimuli from the outside environment into nerve impulses for transmission to the brain?

cochlea

65
New cards

What interventions are available for patients with hearing loss?

  1. Cochlear Implant

66
New cards
  1. Hearing aid

67
New cards

What are the bioethical concerns related to the use of cochlear implant technology?

  1. Separating from the deaf community

68
New cards
  1. Financial issues

69
New cards
  1. Social life

70
New cards
  1. Future life

71
New cards

Describe how a cochlear implant works.

Enables individuals with sensorineural hearing loss and to recognize some sounds. Receives and converts sound waves into electrical signals which are transmitted to one or more electrodes implanted in the cochlea

72
New cards

What is vaccination?

An antigen-specific stimulation of the host immune response to prevent infectious disease

73
New cards

How does a vaccine activate the body's immune system?

A slightly disabled sample of the bacteria is inside the vaccine which triggers the body's immune response to fight it back

74
New cards

How has vaccination impacted disease trends in our country?

  1. It has eliminated diseases like polio and smallpox

75
New cards
  1. Herd immunity

76
New cards

What is herd immunity?

Immunity in most of a population

77
New cards

What methods are used to produce vaccines in the laboratory?

•Live attenuated (weakened)

78
New cards

•Killed or inactivated

79
New cards

•Toxoid

80
New cards

•Genetically engineered

81
New cards

What is recombinant DNA technology?

Allows amplification and isolation of specific genes

82
New cards

What are the molecular tools used to assemble recombinant DNA?

scissors/restriction enzyme, glue/ligase

83
New cards

How can recombinant DNA and bacterial cells be used to produce vaccines?

The bacteria can express the gene that was placed into the plasmid to produce the necessary antigen for the vaccine

84
New cards

How can engineered plasmid be inserted into bacterial cells?

the recombinant plasmid is made and inserted into bacteria via transformation

85
New cards

What is epidemiology?

The study of the prevalence of disease

86
New cards

How can epidemiologists assist with the detection, prevention, and treatment of both chronic and infectious disease?

They can provide the quantitative evidence for justifying needed policies. Also, their input can be helpful in demonstrating the effectiveness of policies once they have been adopted

87
New cards

What is genetic testing?

Techniques used to detect genetic mutations or chromosomal abnormalities

88
New cards

What are the duties of a genetic counselor?

Make recommendations to the patient and their families after diagnosing genetic mutations or chromosomal abnormalities

89
New cards

What is the goal of PCR?

Used to amplify specific sections of DNA

90
New cards

What are the steps of the PCR process?

  1. Denaturation - 98 degrees -- separating DNA

91
New cards
92
New cards
  1. Annealing - 48 to 72 degrees -- allows primer to base pair complementary DNA template

93
New cards
94
New cards
  1. Extension - 68 to 72 degrees -- extends prime to form nascent DNA strand

95
New cards

What is the relationship between phenotype and genotype?

P - Physical and physiological traits on an organism

96
New cards

G - The genetic makeup of an organism (Tt, tt, TT)

97
New cards

What are SNPs?

(Single nucleotide polymorphisms) One base-pair variation in the genome sequence

98
New cards

How can restriction enzymes and electrophoresis be used to identify SNPs and determine genotype?

Restriction enzymes cut the DNA at a specific sequence and gel electrophoresis separates the fragments by size. By looking at the control, you will be able to determine the genotype

99
New cards

What medical interventions and lifestyle modifications can help a pregnant woman have a healthy pregnancy?

  1. Take Folic Acid vitamin

100
New cards
  1. Avoid alcohol and drugs