Enumerate examples and the molecular basis behind these diseases.
Q: Choose a specific disease and prepare anappropriate list of six terms that you could use todescribe…
A: LUNG CANCER: lung are the two spongy organs present in the chest that take in oxygen when the person…
Q: In 1971, Alfred Knudson noticed that children like Kay, who have retinoblastoma in both eyes…
A: Carl O. Nordling first suggested Knudson's two hit theory in 1953. It is a hypothetical idea that…
Q: List Koch’s postulates, and discuss when they might not be appropriate in establishing causation.
A: The bacteria must be present in every case of the disease. The bacteria must be isolated from the…
Q: Recall the etiologic agent of plague, and create a simple diagramof the infection cycle.
A: The plague was a well-feared disease in the past, causing pandemics that killed millions of people.…
Q: Conduct online research to gather information about the sickle-cell trait. In a paragraph, explain…
A: Sickle cell is caused by a mutation in the haemoglobin beta gene found on chromosome 11.Sickle cell…
Q: Have Koch’s postulates been carried out for Lyme disease? Explain.
A: Koch’s postulates have been established as the principle criteria for etiological studies. This…
Q: Based on the image case scenario given. Trace the flowchart pathophysiology of the disease in…
A: Tracheostomy is the surgically created artificial opening in the trachea just below the larynx.…
Q: Prepare a simplifi ed outline of the cell lines of hematopoiesis.
A: Blood is composed of different types of cells such as white blood cells, erythrocytes, thrombocytes,…
Q: Describe the way the Germ Theory of Disease would predict how a suspected causative agent would act…
A: Germ theory is a theory that proposed that certain diseases are caused by the invasion of the body…
Q: List Koch’s postulates, and compare them to the Molecular Koch’s postulates.
A: Robert Koch was a German physician and bacteriologist, who illustrated postulates for deciding…
Q: Identify the biological process by which the malaria carrying mosquitoes (Anopheles coluzzi or…
A: Insecticide resistance in Female Anopheles
Q: Enlist the plausible explanation for the cloudy spinal fluid but the panbacterial PCR results in…
A: Meningitis is the name for the medical disorder in which protective membranes, such as those…
Q: Explain further the disease triangle?
A: The disease traingle is a kind of model that is used to understand or study the host and pathogen…
Q: _________ Studies Can Map Disease _____ with a Resolution of About 1 Centimorgan
A: Meiosis or reductional division is complex process and during this crossing over and recombination…
Q: Discuss the importance of simultaneously using multiple tests to diagnose malaria
A: Introduction Malaria is an illness caused by the bite of infected mosquitoes that transmits the…
Q: separate diseases are the main COPD
A: COPD (chronic pulmonary obstructive disease) is a condition when the respiratory tract becomes…
Q: Which are true regarding tick-borne bacterial diseases? Select all that apply. - One example is the…
A: Tick borne diseases, that affect the human and other animals, are caused by pathogens transmitted…
Q: What is a disease progress curve? Draw an example disease progress curve for a monocyclic disease…
A: Introduction:- Disease program curve is graphical representation of the trends and progression of…
Q: discuss the what is cyst passers and its type 2. which body organs do E. histolytica resides? 3.…
A: Entamoeba is parasitic or can be commensal organism . It is characterized by presence of tiny one…
Q: Enumerate and explain the five (5) symptoms of rice gall midge damage.
A: Introduction: Rice gall midge: It is a pest for paddy crops. This pest causes a tubular gall at the…
Q: What is the cause of malaria? Why does the presence of sickle cell trait confer resistance to some…
A: Malaria is caused by Plasmodium vivax or Plasmodium falciparum. The organism completes its life…
Q: The sum of the years "at-risk" of these 12 courses is 102 students-years and there were 3…
A: Incidence basically tells us about the chances of a person being effected by a disease over a…
Q: Explain the effect that increasing temperatures may have on the incidence of a tropical disease such…
A: Temperate climates are generally defined as environments with moderate rainfall spread across the…
Q: Fulfill the epidemiologic triad as to the host, agent, possible vectors, and environment of the…
A: Bubonic plague, interchangeably termed as the black death. Humans mostly become infected when they…
Q: Oroya fever considered an emerging or re-emerging disease? What are the threats
A:
Q: What is a drug- resistant malaria case? How is it being managed?
A: Drug resistance is the ability of a microorganism to grow in the presence of a drug that should kill…
Q: Explain the cellular and molecular basis of the disease progeria.
A: Progeria--It is not a single but a group of symptoms ,so called as a syndrome . Also known as…
Q: The widal test is used to help in the diagnosis of?
A: Widal test is a serological diagnostic test based on the visible to the eyes agglutination reaction…
Q: According to the recent malaria report of the Department of Health, Disease and Prevention Bureau…
A: The malarial parasite passes its life cycle I'm two different host's. The man is the intermediate…
Q: Write a chain of infection for a communicable disease? Not Covid
A: The process by which an infectious disease spreads in a community is called chain of infection.…
Q: Identify FOUR (4) infectious diseases. For each disease write
A: Many of the diseases are caused by organisms that need to be treated on an imminent basis for…
Q: How many factors inducing hospital acquired infection? Write detailed on any three Factors?
A: Hospital acquired infections are also called as nosocomial infection. it is the infection acquired…
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: Describe the germ theory of disease.
A: Along the lines of understanding the causative of diseases by the humans, various theories were…
Q: h brief and understandable explanations. Distinguish prevalence from inci
A: Incidence is the number of new cases occuring in a defined population during a specified period.…
Q: Explain the strategies used to combat malaria.
A: Parasitism is a type of relationship between two species where one species benefits at the expanse…
Q: Propose a simple model of Covid 19 which describes the four forms of disease. 1) Subclinical form,…
A: COVID-19 is caused by the virus SARS-CoV-2. It is spread by contaminated secretions such as saliva…
Q: Give (2) two recently-developed technologies used in the detection and diagnosis of human diseases.
A: Diagnosis is the procedure by which any of the diseases can be detected and there are various…
Q: Define incidence and prevalence, and explain the difference between them.
A: Epidemiological terms are fundamental concepts and terms used in epidemiology, which is the study…
Q: In protozoan parasites, what are the main molecular pathways of medication resistance? Talk about it…
A: Answer of the question given below...
Q: Compare and contrast the meaning of the term’s colonization, infection, and disease.
A: Colonization refers to the presence of microorganism on the host with growth and proliferation but…
Q: Prepare a simplified outline of the cell lines of hematopoiesis.
A: Hematopoiesis is the process of formation of blood cells. The primary cell lines of hematopoiesis…
Q: Write a chain of infection for any communicable disease… all sections included about the disease?…
A: The chain of infection nothing but the way by which a disease begins and it is spread .There are…
Q: The following graphs illustrate the incidence of pertussis (whooping cough) cases in the United…
A: Due to our answering policy, we can only answer one question at a time. Since you have posted…
Q: With uncommon disease why don’t companies and pharmaceuticals put time and research for uncommon…
A: It has a lot of challenges for them. One such obstacle is, there are small no. of patients…
Q: Koch's postulates is useful in describing diseases. True or false
A: Microbiology is the study of microorganisms. Microorganisms are the minute organisms that are not…
Q: plain why gene mapping is important and how this technique can be used in disease investigation?…
A: Gene mapping is a technique that determines how much percentage genes are linked and how far they…
Enumerate examples and the molecular basis behind these diseases.
give what is ask
Step by step
Solved in 3 steps
- discuss some diseases associated with flawed cytoskeletons – Kartagener’s syndrome, blistering syndromes.59. Identify a FALSE statement from following regarding diptheria toxin, Group of answer choices it's is encoded by chromosomal DNA it induces pseudomembrane formation it's is a AB type toxin acidic pH of the endosome, dissociates the A subunit from the B portion targets primarily the respiratory tract epithelial cells 60. It's recommended to take Calcium supplements, especially for elderly women who are prone to developing osteoporosis when taking ...................... Group of answer choices sulfa drugs penicillin none of the above some of the above streptomycin ciprofloxacillinDrug 2-Lumacaftor (VX-809): In people with the most common CF mutation, F508del, a series of problems prevents the CFTR protein from folding into the correct shape and reaching its proper place on the cell surface. The cell recognizes the protein as abnormal and targets it for degradation before it makes it to the cell surface. In order to treat this problem, two drugs are required - an agent to get the protein to the surface and then Ivacaftor to open the channel and increase chloride transport. The drug Lumacaftor has been identified as a treatment to help with the trafficking of the protein to the cell surface. When Lumacaftor is added to Ivacaftor, the protein gets to the surface and also increases chloride transport by increasing channel opening time. For which class(es) of mutations would Lumacaftor be most effective?
- Which of the following sequences correctly lists in order the steps involved in the incorporation of a proteinaceous molecule within a cell? protein synthesis of the protein on the ribosome; modification in the Golgi apparatus; packaging in the endoplasmic reticulum; tagging in the vesicle synthesis of the protein on the lysosome; tagging in the Golgi; packaging in the vesicle; distribution in the endoplasmic reticulum synthesis of the protein on the ribosome; modification in the endoplasmic reticulum; tagging in the Golgi; distribution via the vesicle synthesis of the protein on the lysosome; packaging in the vesicle; distribution via the Golgi; tagging in the endoplasmic reticulumWhich organelle in the body does treacher collins syndrome affects? And how does it affected, causes problem?188. A 3-year-old boy is brought to the physician because of a 6-month history of a sway back when standing. His brother had a history of muscle weakness and died of pneumonia at the age of 12 years. Physical examination shows hip girdle weakness. His serum creatine kinase concentration is markedly increased. This patient's symptoms are most likely caused by the accumulation of a defective protein in which of the following locations in muscle cells? A) Cytoplasm B) Lysosome C) Mitochondria D) Nuclear membrane E) Peroxisome F) Smooth endoplasmic reticulum h
- Practice Case study p. 224 part: Tuberculosis (TB) in indigenous populations. Lily was a recent science graduate of the University of Alberta and was 11 months into her 12 - month Master of Science in Global Health degree, at Dalhousie University. This relatively new program was created to provide the multidisciplinary training required of scientists working to meet the complex challenges of global public health issues. The University had partnered with the National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health (NCCIH) and that was why Lily now found herself doing her Global Health Field Practicum in the Northern Territories, working on a study of drug resistant TB infections among Innuit communities. The different communities included in her research were close to 7000 individuals, with multiple diagnosed cases of TB. And while she was grateful that drug-resistant TB in Canada remained below the global average (Public Health Agency of Canada, 2019), she was cognizant of the possibility…TOPIC: E. coli T4 (T4 Bacteriophage) Include a maximum of 3 sentences, a brief description of their growth. What are the structures responsible for growth and reproduction? What are their physical and nutritional (or chemical) requirements?What is the Membrane attack complex (MAC)?
- What is the best inhibitor of endoplasmic reticulum stress in human ?b. Cleavage with chymotrypsin produces the following fragments: Band A: CN , NLQY, GIVEQCCHKRSEY Band B: F, Y, DPTKM, IACCVRGF, RTTGHLCGKDLVNALY Cleavage with Staphilococcus aureus V8 protease produces the following fragments: Band A: GIVE, YNLQNYCN, QCCHKRCSE Band B: PTKM, RTTGHLCGKD, LVNALYIACGVRGFFYD What is the amino acid sequence of the protein? Type your responseAmoeboid cells that migrate through our tissues, such as the class of white blood cells known as neutrophils, often do so in a directed manner, triggered, for instance, by chemical signals released by pathogens such as bacteria. Directed migration in response to a chemical stimulus is known as chemotaxis. Part of an efficient chemotactic response is the ability of cells to polarize. As is the case with our structurally-polar polymers like F-actin or microtubules, polarization here refers to an asymmetry in the cells, rather than an electrical charge. In this case, it involves one part of the cell becoming the “front” (or leading edge) and another the rear. In a well-polarized, migrating cell, it’s been observed that an active form of Rac (which, in turn, can activate ARP 2/3) is concentrated towards the front of the cell, whereas an active form of Rho (which, in turn, can activate formin, inhibit ADP, and activate myosin II) is found toward the rear of the cell. Based on your…