This document provides information about various pathogens including bacteria, viruses, protozoa, parasites, prions, and fungi. It describes bacterial infections forming pus, recent measles outbreaks due to lack of vaccination, HPV causing genital warts and cancer, malaria transmitted by mosquitoes, tapeworms from undercooked meat, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease transmitted by prions in improperly butchered beef, and common fungal infections like athlete's foot and ringworm.
1 of 9
Download to read offline
More Related Content
Pathogens
1. Get to know some pathogens up
close and personal.
2. The cut on the right has a bacterial infection.
As the body fights infection, it forms pus.
Pus is a thick, sticky, white, yellowish, or greenish body
fluid that contains a build-up of dead white blood cells
from the bodys immune response.
3. Measles has recently resurfaced as a disease of public
health concern. For many years it has been controlled in
the U.S. by vaccination programs, but failure to vaccinate
some children has resulted in several dangerous
outbreaks. It is one of the most infectious known viruses.
4. Warts are caused by a virus called human papillomavirus
(HPV). Different strain of HPV cause warts on different
parts of the body.
The virus that causes genital warts is known to cause
cancer.
There is a vaccine available for HPV and it is
recommended that all young people get vaccinated
before they become sexually active.
5. The disease Malaria, which is transmitted by
mosquitoes, is an example of a protozoan
infection. The tiny parasites swim in the
bloodstream (see two of them among the red
blood cells in the picture above).
7. A tapeworm can live inside a person
indefinitely and grow to be 20 feet
long! They damage their hosts body
by consuming nutrients and calories.
8. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is caused by prions,
tiny infectious folded proteins. It is transmitted
through improperly butchered infected beef
cattle. In cattle, the same disease is called
Mad Cow.
9. Common fungal infections on skin include Athletes
Foot (left) and Ringworm (right). Fungi like live in
warm, damp places (like between the toes).
Ringworm can be transmitted to people by
household pets, like cats and dogs.
460 300 -
naturalremedies.org