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The Human Digestive System
Figure 25.1
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Normal Microbiota Millions of bacteria per ml of saliva
Large numbers in large intestine 100 billion bacteria per gram of feces
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Defenses Stomach: Acidic Small intestine: Paneth cells
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A Healthy Human Tooth Figure 25.2
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Dental Caries (Tooth Decay)
Figure 25.3a
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Dental Caries (Tooth Decay)
Figure 25.3b
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The Stages of Tooth Decay
Figure 25.4
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Bacterial Diseases of the Mouth
Pathogen Dental caries Streptococcus mutans Periodontal disease Porphyromonas spp. Acute necrotizing gingivitis Prevotella intermedia
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Diseases of Lower Digestive System
Infection: Growth of a pathogen Incubation is from 12 hours to 2 weeks Fever Intoxication: Ingestion of toxin Symptoms appear 1 to 48 hours after ingestion Gastroenteritis: Diarrhea, dysentery Treatment: Oral rehydration therapy
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Staphylococcal Food Poisoning
Pathogen Staphylococcus aureus Symptoms Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea Intoxication/Infection Intoxication Enterotoxin (superantigen) Diagnosis Phage typing Treatment None
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Shigellosis (Bacillary Dysentery)
Pathogen Shigella spp. Symptoms Tissue damage and dysentery Intoxication/Infection Infection Endotoxin and Shiga exotoxin Diagnosis Isolation of bacteria Treatment Quinolones
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Invasion of Intestinal Wall by Shigella
Figure 25.7
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Shigellosis Figure 25.8
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Salmonellosis and Typhoid Fever
Figure 25.10
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Typhoid Fever Caused by Salmonella typhi
Bacteria spread throughout body in phagocytes 1–3% of recovered patients become chronic carriers
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Disease Salmonellosis Typhoid Fever Pathogen Salmonella enterica S. typhi Symptoms Nausea and diarrhea High fever, significant mortality Intoxication/ Infection Infection Endotoxin Diagnosis Isolation of bacteria; serotyping Treatment Oral rehydration Quinolones; cephalosporins
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Vibrios Cholera Noncholera vibrios
Vibrio cholerae serotypes that produce cholera toxin Toxin causes host cells to secrete Cl–, HCO–, and water Noncholera vibrios Usually from contaminated crustaceans or mollusks V. cholerae serotypes other than O:1, O:139, eltor V. parahaemolyticus V. vulnificus
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Vibrio cholerae Figure 25.11
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Vibrio cholerae O:1 and O:139 V. vulnificus
Disease Cholera Noncholera vibrios Pathogen Vibrio cholerae O:1 and O:139 V. parahaemolyticus V. vulnificus Symptoms Diarrhea with large water loss Cholera-like diarrhea, but generally milder Rapidly spreading tissue destruction Intoxication/Infection Cholera toxin (exotoxin) Infection, enterotoxin Infection, siderophores Diagnosis Isolation of bacteria Treatment Rehydration; doxycycline Rehydration; antibiotics Antibiotics
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Escherichia coli Gastroenteritis
Pathogenic E. coli Attach to intestinal cells with fimbriae Produce toxins May aggregate
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Escherichia coli Gastroenteritis
Disease Traveler’s Diarrhea STEC Pathogen Enterotoxigenic, enteroinvasive, enteraggregative E. coli Shiga-toxin-producing E. coli Symptoms Watery diarrhea Shigella-like dysentery; hemorrhagic colitis and hemolytic uremic syndrome
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Escherichia coli Gastroenteritis
Disease Traveler’s Diarrhea STEC Intoxication/Infection Infection Endotoxin Infection Shiga exotoxin Diagnosis Isolation of bacteria Treatment Oral rehydration Quinolones; cephalosporins
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Helicobacter Peptic Ulcer Disease
Figure 25.13
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Helicobacter Peptic Ulcer Disease
Pathogen Helicobacter pylori Symptoms Peptic ulcers Intoxication/Infection Infection Diagnosis Urea breath, bacterial culture Treatment Antimicrobial drugs
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Clostridium and Bacillus Gastroenteritis
Pathogen C. perfringens C. difficile B. cereus Symptoms Diarrhea Diarrhea to colitis Nausea and vomiting; diarrhea Intoxication/Infection Infection Exotoxin Intoxication Diagnosis Isolation of bacteria Cytotoxin assay
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Clostridium and Bacillus Gastroenteritis
Pathogen C. perfringens C. difficile B. cereus Transmitted Metronidazole; discontinue other antibiotic therapy Source of Infection Meats Elimination of normal microbiota Rice dishes
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Viral Diseases of the Digestive System
Mumps Viral Gastroenteritis Pathogen Mumps virus Rotavirus Norovirus Symptoms Swollen parotid glands Vomiting, diarrhea, 1 wk Vomiting, diarrhea, 2–3 days Incubation 16–18 days 1–3 days 14–48 hr Diagnosis EIA PCR Treatment Preventive vaccine Oral rehydration
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A Case of Mumps Figure 25.14
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Hepatitis An inflammation of the liver
May result from drug or chemical toxicity, EB virus, CMV, or the hepatitis viruses
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Hepatitis Viruses Disease Transmission Pathogen Chronic Liver Disease?
Vaccine? Hepatitis A Fecal-oral Picornaviridae No Inactivated virus Hepatitis B Parenteral, STI Hepadnaviridae Yes Recombinant Hepatitis C Parenteral Filoviridae None Hepatitis D Pareteral, HBV coinfection Deltaviridae HBV vaccine Hepatitis E Caliciviridae HAV vaccine
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Hepatitis B Virus (HBV)
Figure 25.15
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