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I23220102007
I23220102007

... symbiont in the host body but are also known to cause serious disease. Staphylococcus aureus is found living symbiotically on the host skins and is responsible for causing skin disease such as boil. Escherichia coli is a bacterium that is found living symbiotically in the host gastrointestinal tract ...
Breast Infection
Breast Infection

... common than periareolar abscesses and have been reported to be associated with a variety of under$ing disease states, such as dia- betes, rheumatoid arthritis, steroid treatment, and trauma.  S. aureus is the organism usually responsible, but ...
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File

... Stage C – opportunistic diseases ...
Chapter 38 Human Diseases Caused  by Bacteria 2 1
Chapter 38 Human Diseases Caused  by Bacteria 2 1

... • Toxic shock syndrome (TSS) • By toxic shock syndrome toxin and other toxins • Disease results from body’s response to  staphylococcal super antigens • Clinical manifestations – Low blood pressure (저혈압), fever (발열), diarrhea  (설사), extensive skin rash (발진), and shedding of skin ...
2.4 Answers
2.4 Answers

... 4. Anaerobic bacteria live in the absence of oxygen. They thrive in any area without air circulation: in the soil, inside the body, or inside a sealed container (e.g., home canning). 5. Conjugation is considered a form of sexual reproduction in bacteria because genetic material is exchanged through ...
Fungs
Fungs

... • It may involve vagina particularly during pregnancy, mouth particularly in infants, oral thrush & in-patients with oral antibiotic therapy. • In patients with T-cell deficiency it causes mucocutaneous candidiasis (chronic disfiguring ...
Biofilms
Biofilms

... Many different MO types → effect limited to spec. species Mutations: cancel inhib. effect ...
kingdom monera
kingdom monera

... strains have become strongly resistant to the antibiotics designed to kill bacteria, however. This means they can often survive frontline antibiotics, constantly challenging the drug companies to find new drug that can kill these strains, known collectively as MRSA (Methicillin Resistant Staphylococ ...
Name
Name

... Many bacteria are also able to exchange genetic information by a process called conjugation. During conjugation, a hollow bridge forms between two bacterial cells, and genes move from one cell to the other. This transfer of genetic information increases genetic diversity in populations of bacteria. ...
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Name

... Penicillin “busts” the bacterial wall. Tetracycline cripples the bacteria’s ability to reproduce (metabolism) DESTROY STRUCTURE OR MESS UP METABOLISM. ...
frog dissection PP2
frog dissection PP2

... Protection: some glands secrete foul-tasting or poisonous substances that protect the frog from enemies ...
[5-11-13]
[5-11-13]

... o Substances difficult to treat with antibiotics = β-lactamase (penicillin resistance) and penicillin-binding protein 2a (PBP2a) (methicillin resistant)  SCC mec DNAs code for PBP2a Usually disease limited by spontaneous drain through skin but if escape from abscess cleared by blood and lymph (unle ...
Parasites
Parasites

... intestines. They may also be ingested through contaminated food or water. You may have itchiness or redness where the larvae penetrate the skin (most likely your feet). • One symptom is craving to eat soil ...
The Integumentary System
The Integumentary System

... bombarded by sunlight and converted to vitamin D (calcium cannot be absorbed from digestive tract) ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Cavitation as a Means of Cleaning Bacteria from the Surface of Cantaloupes Team Members: Uma Balakumar, Taylor Kroeller, Jordan Plahn, Jacqueline Rizzi, Joe Sabanosh Advisors: Dr. Sunny Jung, Dr. Joe Eifert The goal of this project is to develop an efficient and environmentally friendly method for c ...
WISTR Content Teaching Goals: Microbial Life
WISTR Content Teaching Goals: Microbial Life

... Prepared for WISTR 2006, Dr. Ruth A. Gyure ...
Integumentary System - Gantner Avenue Elementary School
Integumentary System - Gantner Avenue Elementary School

...  Keeps water and bacteria out.  The capillary network and sweat glands offer regulation of ...
Name: Period: _____ Date
Name: Period: _____ Date

... nictitating membrane_. They don’t have an external ear, but ...
18.6 Bacterial Diseases and Antibiotics
18.6 Bacterial Diseases and Antibiotics

... 18.6 Bacterial Diseases and Antibiotics Antibiotics are used to fight bacterial disease. • Antibiotic: Chemicals that kill or slow the growth of bacteria. – Work by breaking down the cell wall of bacteria. ...
Bacterial Infections cp
Bacterial Infections cp

... • Bacteria produce 2 kinds of toxins: 1. Endotoxin – found within the cell walls of the bacteria • All produce the same general symptoms: ...
Questions from the Audience
Questions from the Audience

... 7. Relative severity of viral and bacterial infections 8. Cause of influenza 9. Relative sizes of bacteria vs. viruses 10. If an infection is airborne it is … ...
The Wired Atlas of the Human Ecosystem | Wired Magazine | Wired
The Wired Atlas of the Human Ecosystem | Wired Magazine | Wired

... We start out sterile in the womb. But every baby gets coated with microbes the moment it passes through the birth canal. (Babies born by cesarean section are colonized by microbes from their mother’s skin.) More germs take up residence inside our bodies in the months that follow, delivered by bacter ...
Bacteria Internet Lab
Bacteria Internet Lab

... 1. What is the main characteristic that sets the bacteria apart from the other kingdoms? 2. What do prokaryotic cells lack? 3. In what kingdom are the bacteria placed? 4. Name two distinct groups of prokaryotes. ...
ESSENTIALS - Skin Care Consultants
ESSENTIALS - Skin Care Consultants

... Reproduced by Lamskin with permission from Dayspa magazine for limited distribution. ©2011 by Creative Age Publications. No part of this article can be altered, changed, or reused in any way without the express consent of the publisher. ...
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File

... 8. The chemical in bleach responsible for antimicrobial activity: *c. Chlorine 9. Which is mismatched? *c. Bactericidal = inactivates bacteria 10. One flagellum at one end of the bacterial cell is called *e. Monotrichous 11. Which of the following bacteria contain Mycolic acid in their cell wall: *b ...
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Skin flora



The skin flora, more properly referred to as the skin microbiota, are the microorganisms which reside on the skin. Most research has been upon those that reside upon the 2 square metres of human skin, cf. the human microbiome. The skin microbiome refer to their genomes.Many of them are bacteria of which there are around 1000 species upon human skin from 19 phyla. The total number of bacteria on an average human has been estimated at 1012 (1 trillion). Most are found in the superficial layers of the epidermis and the upper parts of hair follicles.Skin flora is usually non-pathogenic, and either commensal (are not harmful to their host) or mutualistic (offer a benefit). The benefits bacteria can offer include preventing transient pathogenic organisms from colonizing the skin surface, either by competing for nutrients, secreting chemicals against them, or stimulating the skin's immune system. However, resident microbes can cause skin diseases and enter the blood system creating life-threatening diseases particularly in immunosuppressed people.A major nonhuman skin flora is Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, a chytrid and non-hyphal zoosporic fungus that causes chytridiomycosis, an infectious disease thought to be responsible for the decline in amphibian populations.
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