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TEST 2 PARTIAL REVIEW Caution: This is NOT a complete review. You still need to go over the power points, notes, and readings. Name That Disease. Erthyma migrans Woolsorters Disease Cobblestone Eye A Venereal Disease in Dogs Referred to as Dever and Shachean
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TEST 2 PARTIAL REVIEWCaution: This is NOT a complete review. You still need to go over the power points, notes, and readings.
Name That Disease • Erthyma migrans • Woolsorters Disease • Cobblestone Eye • A Venereal Disease in Dogs • Referred to as Dever and Shachean • Associated with Weapons of Mass Disruption • Bt • The Great Imitator • Bangs Disease • Undulant Fever, Malta Fever, Mediterranean Fever • Gaol Fever, Jail Fever, Hospital Fever • Gay Cancer • German Measles
Name That Disease • The Seventh Day Death • The Silent Disease • SIDS • "El garatillo" (the strangler")and as "the gullet disease". • Requires a Hyperbolic Chamber • Lock Jaw • Chinese-letter Arrangement • Lizard Skin • May Require the Use of an Iron Lung • Koplik’s Spots • Requires Iron Lungs
Name That Disease • Associated with Martha’s Vineyard • Demonstrates a Donut Shaped Ulcer • Hansen’s Disease • Consumption • The Clap • The Black Death • Macular Eruption • Enteric Fever • Peeling Skin
Name That Disease • Scalded Baby Syndrome • Bull Neck • Scarlet Cheeks and Strawberry Tongue • Great Pox or French Disease • The most rapidly fatal bacterial illnesses • Used as biological weapon during the French and Indian War • Viral Disease that first spread to the United States in 1999 • Associated with the Navajo Tribe
Name That Disease • Caused Multiple Epidemics in the 1800’s • Caused an Epidemic from the 1930’s – 1950’s • Occurred During Our Bicentennial • Hit the United States in 1999 • Became Evident in the 1980’s and is a World Wide Problem Today
What Part of the County Has the Highest Incidence of Bubonic Plague?Lyme Disease?Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever?Tularemia?
Why do we see such a high incidence of Tularemia in Native Americans and Native Alaskans?
Name That Bacterium • Leading cause of diarrhea worldwide and the second most common cause in the United States • A life-threatening condition consisting of the presence of bacteria in the blood and often results in spontaneous abortions. • The most frequently reported bacterial sexually transmitted disease in the United States. • Once used oral tetracycline to treat this illness.
Name That Bacterium • The leading domestic animal abortion causing bacterium • Has recently been associated with the development of coronary heart diseases by sero-epidemiological studies and by direct detection of the organism in atherosclerotic tissues. • Nongonococcal Urethritis • The most common gram negative pathogen. The second most common?
Name That Bacterium • Leading cause of UTIs • Associated with food poisoning at Jack-In-the-Box • Rabbit Fever • Associated with Stomach Ulcers • Associated with Pediatric Septicemia • Confused with the Flu in 1976 • Erythema nodosum
Name That Bacterium • It is the most common pathogen isolated from patients who have been hospitalized longer than 1 week. • Walking Pneumonia • Associated with Bedsores. • Commonly associated with Epidermal Infections, Wounds, Burns, Abscesses • Associated with nearly all gastrointestinal infections following antibiotic therapy.
Name That Bacterium • Associated with Green Nail Syndrome • A common cause of systemic bacterial infection in patients with AIDS. It has been linked to bacterial colonization of domesticwater supplies and commonly occurs through the gastrointestinal tract • Associated with tampon use
Define • Malaise • Myalgia • Mortality • Morbidity • TBHQ • Guillain-Barré syndrome • Botox • Crepitance • Emphysema • Ischemic Tissue • AIDS
Define • Dental Caries • Snuffles • El Tor • HSV-I • HSV-2 • Varicella • Roseola • Rubeola • Rubella • March of Dimes • Pastia’s Lines • Sydenham’s Chorea
Define • Debridement • Bloat in Cattle • Torte Claims Act • Tumon Colony • Indian Camp Plantation • Mantoux Test • PID • Brill-Zinsser disease • Bergen-Belsen • Carbuncle • Furuncle • Ro
Tuberculosis weakens your immune system to the point that you are very susceptible to __________ infections.
Anthrax Brucellosis Pertussis Lyme Disease Campylobacteriosis Tetanus Tularemia Chlamydia Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever Botulism Tetanus Diphtheria Ulcers Tuberculosis Leprosy Typhoid Fever Typhus Syphilis Cholera How Do I Contract?
Anthrax Brucellosis Lyme Disease Psittacosis Salmonella Gas Gangrene Tularemia Legionnaire's Disease Leprosy Typhoid Fever Typhus Pseudomonas Cholera Hanta Virus Lassa Fever Bubonic Plague Smallpox West Nile Virus What is the Reservoir for…
What is the difference between active and passive surveillance?Name a disease tracked by both methods.What is Sentinel Surveillance? Name a Disease Tracked by this method.
Leprosy has been linked to another neurological disease. Which one?Which gender is most at risk for leprosy?
What is the Vector or Vehicle for…? • Tularemia • Black Plague • Lyme Disease • E. coli 0157:H7 • Typhoid Fever • Typhus • Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever • West Nile Virus • Dengue Fever
What Is An Accidental Host?Name a Disease in Which Humans are Accidental Hosts.
Name the Disease? • Cutaneous 20% Fatal • Inhalation 95% to 100% Fatal • Gastrointestinal 25% to 100% Fatal
Bacillus thuringiensisWhat is it?What toxin does it produce?What crops have been genetically enhanced with this bacteria?
Lyme Disease • What area of the country has Lyme Disease? • What is the vector? • What is the causative organism? • What form of the disease is generally fatal?
Name Diseases that start out as an infectious disease and develop into a chronic condition?Why is this a concern?
Name Bacterial Diseases that Have No Cure.Name Viral Diseases that Have No Cure.
What are the 3 forms of Brucellosis?What is the main difference among them? Brucellosis only has a 2% mortality rate, so why are we concerned about it?
What is the Most Common Viral Sexually Transmitted Infection?
Chlamydia has been linked to an increased risk of ____ in women?
Name the highly virulent form of E. coli.What foods do we associate with this bacterium?How does it affect children?
Food Poisoning? • Cyclospora and _____ • Listeria and _____ • Hepatitis A and ______ • Campylobacter and _____ • Salmonella and _____