front 1 What is the first line of defense? | back 1 Physical and chemical barriers |
front 2 What is the second line of defense? | back 2 Inflammation, fever, phagocytosis |
front 3 What are the phagocytes in the 2nd line of defense? | back 3 Neutrophils, macrophages |
front 4 What is the 3rd line of defense? | back 4 B and T cells |
front 5 What do B cells produce? | back 5 Antibodies |
front 6 What is the first step of phagocytosis? | back 6 Chemotaxis by phagocyte |
front 7 What is the second step of phagocytosis? | back 7 Adhesion of bacteria |
front 8 What is the third step of phagocytosis? | back 8 Engulfment into phagocytic vacoule |
front 9 What is the fourth step of phagocytosis? | back 9 phagosome |
front 10 What is the fifth step of phagocytosis? | back 10 Phagolysosome formation |
front 11 What is the sixth step of phagocytosis? | back 11 Killing and destruction |
front 12 What is the seventh step of phagocytosis? | back 12 Release of debris |
front 13 Which event occurs in the early stages of inflammation | back 13 Chemical mediators and cytokines are released |
front 14 What is the function of selectins | back 14 They promote sticking of neutrophils to the inner vessel wall |
front 15 True or False: Margination occurs when neutrophils stick to the lining of the endothelium | back 15 True |
front 16 Which role does histamine play during inflammation | back 16 Leads to vasodilation |
front 17 Extravastation, also known as diapedesis or transmigration, occurs when ____ | back 17 Neutrophils squeeze through the vessel wall |
front 18 Are interferons a first line of defense or a second line of defense? | back 18 Second |
front 19 Evaluate the statements below, and select those that correctly apply to the role of PAMPs and PRRs in microbe recognition and phagocytosis.
| back 19
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front 20 What are components that comprise the first line defense mechanisms? | back 20 Physical barriers, chemical defenses such as lysozyme and HCl, resident microbiota, and body functions such as sneezing, urinating, coughing, and vomiting |
front 21 Normal biota appear to contribute to first line defense mechanisms through ____ | back 21 antagonism |
front 22 Similiar to macrophages, _______ cells are products of the monocytic cell line that reside throughout the tissues and present antigen to lymphocytes. | back 22 Dendritic |
front 23 Select the nonspecific processes below: Inflammatory response complement cascade Phagocytosis Interferon production Antibody production | back 23 Inflammatory response Complement cascade Phagocytosis Interferon production |
front 24 Fever enhances _____ and _____ mechanisms in the host | back 24 Metabolism; protective |
front 25 When a cell is infected by a virus, synthesis of ______ begins and this protein diffuses away from the infected cell to protect nearby uninfected cells by binding to surface receptors and initiating synthesis of antiviral proteins. | back 25 Interferon |
front 26 List the antimicrobial proteins | back 26 Interferons, complement, ATPase, Bacteriocin |
front 27 Select the correctly described examples of host defense mechanisms.
| back 27
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front 28 MHC-I molecules are located on what type of cells? | back 28 All nucleated cells |
front 29 True or False: MHC-I molecules normally display "self" proteins, those that are normally produced by a cell. | back 29 True |
front 30 In the case of cancer or viral infection, which MHC class is involved with displaying abnormal proteins to cytotoxic T cells as a signal for destruction? | back 30 I |
front 31 MHC-II molecules are located on what type of cells? | back 31 Macrophages, dendritic cells, and B cells |
front 32 Helper T cells require antigen processing and presentation by MHC-___ | back 32 II |
front 33 What types of immunity do host defenses consist of? | back 33 Innate immunity and adaptive immunity |
front 34 Adaptive immunity provides ___ (anamnestic response), ____ (antibody secretion), ____ (cell-mediated immunity) | back 34 Memory, antibody secretion, activated Tc and Th cells |
front 35 Adaptive immunity is divided between | back 35 Active and passive immunity |
front 36 True or false: first and second line defenses display antigen-specificity | back 36 False |
front 37 What line of defenses displays immunologic memory | back 37 third line |
front 38 What are the four major steps of a specific immune response? | back 38 Lymphocyte development Antigen presentation Challenge of B and T lymphocytes B and T lymphocyte responses |
front 39 _____ are substances that provoke a specific immune response which is so discriminating that only a single molecular fragment, called an _______, interacts with the lymphocyte’s receptor. | back 39 Antigens; epitope |
front 40 Select the statements that accurately describe antigens. Check All That Apply
| back 40
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front 41 What cell types serve as APCs | back 41 B cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells |
front 42 What describes the primary action of B cells | back 42 B cells divide and differentiate forming plasma cells that secrete antibodies |
front 43 What describes the method of Cytotoxic T cell-mediated killing of a target cell? | back 43 Apoptosis |
front 44 What is the coating of microbe with antibody to enhance phagocytosis? | back 44 Opsonization |
front 45 What antibodies fill the surface receptors on microbes to prevent its attachment to the host | back 45 Neutralization |
front 46 What antibody that neutralizes bacterial exotoxins | back 46 Antitoxin |
front 47 What crosslinkage of cells or particles into large clumps | back 47 Agglutination |
front 48 True or false: Memory B cells are formed during the primary response
so that upon a secondary antigen exposure, a faster and
more | back 48 True |
front 49 A person's own body produces B and T cell responses to antigen stimulus | back 49 Active immunity |
front 50 An individual receives immune substances that were produced by another host | back 50 Passive immunity |
front 51 Immunity is acquired through normal life experiences, not through medical intervention | back 51 Natural immunity |
front 52 Immunity is obtained through medical procedures such as immunization | back 52 Artificial immunity |
front 53 Select the statements that pertain to the principle herd of immunity
| back 53
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front 54 Infections transmitted by arthropod biological vectors use which of the following portals of entry? | back 54 skin |
front 55 Which is used by the greatest number of pathogens? | back 55 Respiratory tract |
front 56 True or False: Nervous system diseases must always use the respiratory tract as a portal of entry because of its proximity to the brain. | back 56 False |
front 57 Infections that are transmitted by ticks and other biting arthropods use what portal of exit | back 57 Blood removal |
front 58 Pathogens that leave through feces are usually transmitted through ___ contact | back 58 Indirect |
front 59 Pathogens that leave through the respiratory portal by sneezing or coughing are usually transmitted through _______. | back 59 Droplets |
front 60 A pathogen can lead to attachment and avoidance of host defenses, which depend on ____ | back 60 Virulence factors |
front 61 Virulence factors may trigger ____ and _____ | back 61 Toxemia and fever |
front 62 Virulence factors may enhance _____ | back 62 morbidity |
front 63 What is the mode of transmission from lyme disease? | back 63 biological vector |
front 64 What is the mode of transmission for salmonellosis from egg salad | back 64 vehicle |
front 65 What are 3 ways a pathogen survives host defenses? | back 65 Avoiding phagocytosis, avoiding death inside phagocyte, and absence of specific immunity |
front 66 what is the difference between signs and symptoms? | back 66 Sign: Objective manifestations of disease observed or measured by others Symptoms: Subjective characteristics of disease felt only by the patient |
front 67 True or false: Colonization of a body tissue by microbes most often results in the establishment of disease. | back 67 False |
front 68 True or false: Resident microbiota can cause disease in some individuals if they gain access to the correct portal of entry. | back 68 True |
front 69 The relative ability of a microbe to establish itself in a host and cause disease is referred to as ______. | back 69 Virulence |
front 70 True or false: The presence of a capsule can enhance a microbe's virulence. | back 70 True |
front 71 The ability of a nonpathogen or weakly pathogenic microorganism to cause disease primarily in an immunocompromised host is termed a(n) ______ infection. | back 71 opportunistic |
front 72 What are the steps a microorganism take in process of establishing disease | back 72 Microbe enters through portal of entry, microbe attaches to receptor on host, microbe overcomes host defenses, disease is established |
front 73 Select the statements that accurately reflect virulence factors.
| back 73 Hemolysins break down the cell membranes of blood cells, damaging them. Toxins are examples of virulence factors. |
front 74 True or false: An infectious agent cannot be transmitted from a patient during the convalescent period. | back 74 False |
front 75 True or false: reservoirs are always humans or other animals | back 75 False |
front 76 A teacher walking through her first grade classroom pauses to pick up a used tissue that had ended up on the floor instead of in the waste basket. Unfortunately, after discarding the tissue, she doesn’t immediately wash her hands and acquires a strain of rhinovirus. Several days later, she begins to experience symptoms of a cold. Based upon this scenario, please select the mode of disease transmission demonstrated here. | back 76 Fomite |
front 77 During 2007, there were 3.6 new cases of pertussis per 100,000 susceptible individuals in the United States, part of a steady increase that has been occurring since the 1980s. Select the term that is illustrated by this statistic. | back 77 Incidence |