AVOIDANCE & TREATMENT OF INFECTIOUS DISEASE Part 1 The Bodys Defenses

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AVOIDANCE & TREATMENT OF INFECTIOUS DISEASE

Part 1

The Body’s Defenses

The Body’s Defenses

Our body’s lines of defense

– Barriers

– Inflammatory Response

– Immune Response

Your Body’s Lines of Defense

What are the 3 lines of defense your body has to fight pathogens?

a. Barriers to pathogens

b. the Inflammatory Response

c. the Immune Response

1st Line of Defense

How does your skin keep pathogens from getting in?

• Chemicals in the oil and sweat in your skin can kill pathogens.

• Pathogens can fall off when dead skin falls off.• Dead skin cells are packed together tightly,

preventing pathogens from getting in.

1st Line of Defense

How do your breathing passages keep pathogens from getting in?

• Pathogens are trapped and removed in the mucus and cilia of your nose, pharynx, trachea, and bronchi.

• Pathogens can irritate you and cause you to sneeze or cough, which forces the pathogens out.

1st Line of Defense

How does your mouth and stomach keep microbes from getting in?

• Saliva in your mouth contains chemicals that destroy pathogens.

• Stomach acid destroys pathogens.

1st Line of Defense

YOUR BODY’S 1st LINE OF DEFENSE:– Skin– Breathing Passages– Mouth & Stomach

These barriers work really well, but sometimes pathogens can still get in….

2nd Line of Defense

When pathogens get past your first line of defense, and begin to damage cells. The cells release chemicals that begin the 2nd line of defense: THE INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE.

2nd Line of Defense

What is the Inflammatory Response?

Fluid and white blood cells leak from blood vessels into nearby tissues. The white blood cells fight the pathogens. This is the body’s general defense (used against everything).

2nd Line of Defense

What is a Phagocyte? What kind of cell is it?

A phagocyte is a type of white blood cell that engulfs pathogens and destroys them by breaking them down. It doesn’t care what kind of pathogen it is, it still tries to kill it.

A Phagocyte destroying bacteria

2nd Line of Defense

What happens during inflammation?

The area around the damaged cells swells up because more blood flows to the area and more white blood vessels are present. This makes the area look red, swollen, and feel warm.

2nd Line of Defense

Why do we get a fever?

Sometimes during the inflammatory response, chemicals are produced. They raise the temperature of your body because it slows the growth and reproduction of bacteria. IT’S A GOOD THING.

3rd Line of Defense

If the infection from the microbe is bad enough to cause a fever, it triggers the 3rd line of defense – the IMMUNE RESPONSE.

3rd Line of Defense

What are Lymphocytes?

A type of white blood cell that distinguishes between the different kinds of pathogens. There are 2 major kinds – T cells and B cells.

3rd Line of Defense

What do T Cells do?

T cells identify the type of pathogens that are infecting you.

3rd Line of Defense

What are Antigens?

Antigens are molecules found on each pathogen. They tell your immune system whether the pathogen is part of your body or foreign.

3rd Line of Defense

What do B Cells do?

B cells produce proteins called antibodies that help destroy pathogens.

3rd Line of Defense

What are Antibodies?Antibodies are proteins that help kill pathogens. They attach to antigens like 2 puzzle pieces. Once they’re attached, they mark the pathogen for death by:

Making the pathogen clump together, or preventing the microbe from attaching to your cells, or making it easier for phagocytes to kill the pathogen.

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