Introduction To CDC Pathogens - 2019 - 2020
Introduction To CDC Pathogens - 2019 - 2020
Introduction To CDC Pathogens - 2019 - 2020
LECTURE OBJECTIVES
• By the end of this lecture, the student should be able to
• Define and understand what is meant by communicable
diseases
• Define terms associated with Communicable Diseases
• List the various types of Pathogens and the features Micro and
Macro parasites
• Differentiate between infection and diseases
• Describe the different types of transmission
DEFINITION
• QUESTION:
WHAT ARE COMMUNICABLE DISEASES?
DEFINITION
• ANSWER:
A communicable disease is an illness that is transmitted from a person,
animal or inanimate source to another person either directly, with the
assistance of a vector or by other means.
• Communicable:
– epidemic (e.g. ebola)
– endemic (e.g. malaria)
• Non-communicable:
– acute (e.g. accidents)
– chronic (e.g. diabetes).
Communicable vrs Non Communicable
• Previously the difference between communicable and non-
communicable diseases was quite clear
• Exotic diseases are those which are imported into a country in which
they do not otherwise occur, as for example, rabies in the UK.
Zoonosis, epizootic and enzootic
• Zoonosis is an infection that is transmissible under natural conditions
from vertebrate animals to man, e.g. rabies, plague, bovine
tuberculosis…..
• An epizotic is an outbreak (epidemic) of disease in an animal population,
e.g. rift valley fever.
• An Enzotic is an endemic occurring in animals, e.g. bovine TB.
Nosocomial infections
• Nosocomial (hospital acquired) infection is an infection
originating in a patient while in a hospital or another health
care facility. It has to be a new disorder unrelated to the
patient’s primary condition. Examples include infection of
surgical wounds, hepatitis B and urinary tract infetions.
Opportunistic infection
• This is infection by organisms that take the opportunity
provided by a defect in host defense (e.g. immunity) to infect
the host and thus cause disease. For example, opportunistic
infections are very common in AIDS. Organisms include Herpes
simplex, cytomegalovirus,
• M. tuberculosis….
Eradication and Elimination
• Termination of all transmission of infection by the extermination of the infectious
agent through surveillance and containment. Eradication is an absolute process, an
“all or none” phenomenon, restricted to termination of infection from the whole
world.
• “Great fleas have little fleas upon their back to bite 'em, and
little fleas have lesser fleas, and so ad infinitum”
Taxonomic Classification of Pathogens
• Prions • Nematodes
• Viruses • Helminths
• Bacteria • Arthropods
• Protozoa
FUNCTIONAL CLASSIFICATION OF PATHOGENS
• This reflects on fundamental biological features.
• If more than one person gets infected, and they subsequently infect
more than one an epidemic will occur.
• This idea is described in epidemiology as the basic reproductive
number R0.
Basic reproductive Number (R0)
• The formal definition for R0 is the average number of secondary
infections, generated by the first infectious individual in a population of
completely susceptible individuals.
WHAT FACTORS CONTRIBUTE TO R0
• R0 increase with the length of infection (Duration of infection).
• The more susceptible hosts there are to infect, the greater the
potential there is for the first individual to transmit the infection.
•
• These two terms together give us the potential number of contacts
over the course of an infection.