Q: What is a VRE infection?
A: Bacterial diseases are bacteria-caused ailments. The human body contains a variety of microbes. Some…
Q: How can type IV pili facilitate pathogenesis? What are hami?
A: Pathogenesis is characterized as the origin and development of a disease. In many cases, the tissue…
Q: What are the components of the yearly infl uenza vaccine? How is it manufactured? How do you explain…
A: The third part of the question cannot be answered as this question requires me to exercise my…
Q: How is plague transmitted? Distinguish between bubonic and pneumonic plague.
A: Plague is basically an infectious disease, which is caused due to Yersinia pestis which is a…
Q: hat are the mitigating measures to prevent the escalation of the black Sigatoka disease? Explain.
A: A disease is a condition in which an organism's physiological functions are dysfunctional (either a…
Q: normal microbiota beneficial
A: what are normal microbiota? '' normal microbiota '' denotes to the population of microoganisms that…
Q: what are the steps to reconstituting the antibiotics
A: Question is related to drug calculation and also asked about how to reconstitute antibiotic.…
Q: Your father, age 74, has been recovering in a rehabilitation center from a hip fracture. He has…
A: C. diff or Clostridioides difficile refers to the infection of the colon that leads to severe…
Q: Why is poliovirus spread so effectively?
A: The causative agent for polio, the poliovirus is a virus that contains single stranded RNA genome…
Q: Does Mycobacterium tuberculosis produce an exotoxin or endotoxin Discuss how this affects the host.…
A: This question is based on the mycobacterium tuberculosis and the difference between endotoxin and…
Q: Among hospital patients who have infections, one-third did not enter the hospital with the infection…
A: Hospitals are one of the major places where visitors have a high chance of getting many infections.…
Q: Why is MRSA not confined to transmission only in hospitals?
A: MRSA is the methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus that is a resistant strain of S. aureus. It…
Q: Viral meningitis is usually always fatal if untreated, unlikebacterial meningitis, which is always…
A: Bacteria are microscopic organisms which belong to prokaryote because these are unicellular…
Q: What are blood born pathogens and how can it be prevented
A: Disease-causing microorganisms are pathogens.
Q: osaic disease was NOT caused by a bacteria?
A: The virus can be defined as the submicroscopic infectious agent that can replicate inside the living…
Q: Why is handwashing an important means to control the spread of norovirus?
A: Introduction Viral infections are very harmful for mankind. In the post century where we faced the…
Q: How is impetigo spread?
A: The immune system of the body protects the individual from the attack of external pathogens. The…
Q: What would cause a local infection to spread into a pandemic so rapidly?
A: A pandemic is a global epidemic. An epidemic is when an infectious disease is widespread in a…
Q: How does the CD4 countingact to monitor the HIVinfection? What is anotherlaboratory method to…
A: HIV stands for Human Immunodeficiency Virus. It is a positive strand enveloped RNA virus, belongs to…
Q: Does EBV have a parasitic relationship with its host since it infects the host?
A: Parasitism is a type of interspecific relationship in which one, the parasite, is benefitted while…
Q: Name a molecular diagnostic techniqiue to detect the presence of a pathogen in its early stage of…
A: Infection is a condition when a microorganism enters the body and causes harm. Actually, the…
Q: What are the types of transmissions diseases in a hospital and provide one example of each
A: A disease is an abnormal state of an organism that disrupts biological processes; it is…
Q: What caused the Bubonic plague pathogens to transmit to humans?
A: Bubonic plague is an infectious fever caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis. The disease was…
Q: How is the timing of a propagated epidemic related to the incubation period of the pathogen?
A: Epidemic refers to the widespread occurrence of a disease to a large number of people in a…
Q: Why is it only necessary to include the exotoxin (in toxoid form) in vaccines for tetanus and…
A: Exotoxin are the toxins produced by bacteria without cell lysis these toxin causes disease in the…
Q: If transmission rate is 0.7 and recovery rate is 0.3, what is the basic reproductive number of this…
A: Vaccinations and Immunizations started in the 18th century, with the Smallpox Vaccination, created…
Q: What is the germ theory of disease? why it is essential to the treatment of infectious diseases?
A: Microbiology is the study of microorganisms that are invisible to the naked eye. The microorganisms…
Q: List the stages of infection and the typical incubation periods What is the difference between…
A: Infection occurs when some infectious agent in the form of microorganisms may infect a person and is…
Q: How can the Kuru disease be managed and prevented?
A: Here we provide the ways to manage and prevent the kuru disease.
Q: What is the Germ Theory of Disease? List the contributions of Louis Pasteur, Robert Koch, and Joseph…
A: The germ theory of disease states that the cause of a disease is ‘germs’ or pathogens. This theory…
Q: How can the outcome of an SV40 viral infection differ inpermissive versus nonpermissive hosts?
A: Virus is a microorganism that is smaller when compared to a bacterium. They lack the ability to…
Q: What causes the viral plaques that appear on a bacterial lawnto stop growing larger?
A: Viruses are microscopic agents that can replicate only inside the host cells. They can infect all…
Q: What is the malaria impact on global health? What are the pros/cons of the Malaria Vaccine impact?
A: Malaria is a disease that is caused by the parasite belonging to the genus Plasmodium. Malaria is…
Q: How does TMV spread from one host cell to another?
A: Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) can be defined as the positive-sense single-stranded RNA virus species…
Q: What are those protruding parts on a pathogen called?
A: The protrusive structures present on the pathogen help in interaction with its host. Please find…
Q: What are the components of the yearly infl uenza vaccine? How is it manufactured?
A: Components of yearly influenza vaccine and its method of preparation is given below
Q: In agriculture, what are the six steps involved in the disease cycle? Describe what occurs at each…
A: The series of events from the development of disease, which also includes stages of developmet of…
Q: Why is it important to take medicine like vitamin c, zinc, and rosehip oil in this time of the…
A: Healthy diet It includes balanced diet, and contains different types of nutrition such as,…
Q: Why is Zika virus disease considered dangerous even though itrarely kills?
A: The Zika virus is a single-stranded ribonucleic acid (RNA) virus that belongs to the Flaviviridae…
Q: Who is most at risk for contracting plague and why?
A: Infection is defined as the state of invasion on the body tissues of an organism, which is caused by…
Q: Why is Graves’ disease dangerous?
A: Graves disease is an autoimmune disease which is caused due to overactive thyroid gland. It result…
Q: What are the treatment approach of H.pylori infection after failed the initial therapy
A: Helicobacter pylori is a helical gram-negative bacteria that colonize and infect the digestive…
Q: Compare toxigenic E. coli disease with invasive disease. How are they different?
A: Introduction: There are various clinical subtypes of diarrhoeal diseases. The condition in which…
Q: Besides Lyme disease, is there another pathogen transmitted to ticks by way of the white footed…
A: Ticks spread disease taking white-footed mouse as a reservoir. In case, the pathogen infects the…
Q: explain The lytic cycle of phage multiplication
A: The lytic cycle of phage multiplication includes the production of viral progeny in the bacterial…
Q: Cytomegalovirus has the ability to move between adjacent cells: How does Cytomagalovirus contribute…
A: Cytomegalovirus continues to be an important pathogen in a variety of patient groups especially the…
Q: Explain the four steps in a lytic phage infection.
A: Bacteriophage is a bacteria-eating virus. A bacteriophage's structure is similar to that of a…
- How long does it take for SSPE to appear after the initial infection?
Step by step
Solved in 3 steps