This document discusses disease and immunity. It defines pathogens and how they cause damage and enter the body. The body has mechanical, chemical, and cellular defenses against pathogens like hairs, mucus, stomach acid, lymphocytes, and phagocytes. Good hygiene practices like handwashing, food handling, waste disposal, and personal hygiene help reduce disease transmission. The immune system produces antibodies to mark pathogens for destruction. Memory cells provide long-term immunity after infection. Active immunity occurs through antibody production while passive immunity uses antibodies from another source temporarily.
2. Pathogens
Bacteria
e.g. cholera,
syphilis, TB, tetanus
Virus
e.g. influenza, AIDS,
common cold
Protoctist
e.g. malaria,
amoebic dysentery
Fungus
e.g. athlete’s foot,
ring worm
PATHOGENS
• A PATHOGEN IS A MICROORGANISM THAT CAUSES DISEASE. IF A
PATHOGEN CAN BE PASSES FROM A PERSON TO ANOTHER THIS IS
CALLED A TRANSMISSIBLE DISEASE.
3. HOW PATHOGENS DAMAGE THE BODY
• 1. Pathogens damage cells by using up
their resources.
• 2. May produce wastes or toxins that
may raise the body temperature, cause
rashes, cause the person to feel ill or
even cause death.
4. How pathogens enter the body
(infection)
Direct
contact
Indirect
contact
Respiratory
passages
In food or
water
By vectors
e.g. Athlete’s foot,
HIV
e.g. influenza & cold e.g. Salmonella e.g. rabies,
5. BODY DEFENCES
MECHANICAL BARRIERS
Structures that make it difficult
for pathogens to enter the
body e.g.
1. Hairs in nostrils
2. Thick dead layer of skin
(keratin)
3. Clots that seal damaged skin
until it heals
CHEMICAL BARRIERS
Substances/ liquids secreted
by body to trap/ kill
microorganisms
1. Sticky mucus in respiratory
tract to trap microorganisms
which are later swept by ……?
2. HCl secreted by stomach
wall kills microorganisms in
food and swallowed mucus
6. CELLULAR DEFENCE
LYMPHOCYTES
• Produce antibodies that
damage the cell wall of
bacteria or clump them
together or mark them to be
easily detected by phagocytes.
PHAGOCYTES
• Engulfs microorganisms
into a phagocytic vacuole
into which digestive
enzymes are released.
7. FOOD HYGIENE
• 1. Wash hands before and after touching /eating food. When preparing
food keep hair out of the food, wear uniform.
• 2. Keep animals away from food, cover food to prevent house flies
landing on them.
• 3. Do not keep food in a warm place for a long time, this allows bacteria
to reproduce and spoil the food. Keep food in the fridge to slow down
bacterial growth.
• 4. Keep raw meat from mixing with other foods. Cooking kills bacteria in
raw meat, but if mixed with vegetables for salads it may cause illness.
8. PERSONAL HYGIENE
• KEEPING THE BODY CLEAN REDUCES THE RISK OR GETTING OR PASSING ON
TRANSMISSIBLE DISEASES.
• THE SKIN PRODUCES OIL TO KEEP IT WATERPROOF AND SUPPLE, IT ALSO
PRODUCES SWEAT TO COOL DOWN THE BODY
• OIL, DIRT AND SWEAT PROVIDE A GOOD MEDIUM FOR BACTERIA TO BREED.
WASHING SKIN REMOVES THE OIL, SWEAT & DIRT THAT CAN BUILD UP ALONG
WITH MICROORGANISMS ON THE SKIN. BRUSHING TEETH REMOVES THE
BACTERIA IN MOUTH THAT MAY CAUSE BAD BREATH AND TOOTH DECAY.
• KEEPING NAILS SHORT WILL ALSO ELIMINATE A PLACE WHERE BACTERIA MIGHT
NOT BE WASHED OFF WHILE WASHING YOUR HANDS.
9. WASTE DISPOSAL
• Proper disposal of wastes is essential to
prevent attraction of organisms such as
flies, cockroaches and rats. Such
organisms help to spread diseases.
• A landfill is lined with a waterproof
material to prevent pollutants from
leaking into the ground water. Layers of
rubbish are placed and compacted till
the landfill is full.
• It is covered with soil and grass and
trees.
• Pipes are placed in a way to collect
methane gas, which might be collected
10. THE IMMUNE SYSTEM
• Lymphocytes are specialised WBS
that produce antibodies.
• Antibodies: proteins that have a
specific shape that binds onto an
antigen on the surface of a cell.
• Antigens: molecules that have a
specific shape and are found on the
surface of any cell membrane.
• If an antibody locks onto an
antigen:
1. It acts as a marker for phagocytes
to easily identify the pathogen and
engulf it.
2. It may start a series of reactions in
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11. A FOREIGN ANTIGEN IS DETECTED!
• Clone cells are
produced in large
numbers.
• Some of these cells
remain in the blood
for a long time,
acting as memory
cells, having these
cells a person is said
to be immune to that
disease.
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12. ACTIVE & PASSIVE IMMUNITY
• Active immunity is defence against
a pathogen by antibody production
in the body.
• Passive immunity having antibodies
provided from another organism,
that temporarily protect against a
pathogen.
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