BIOL 0510 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Upper Respiratory Tract Infection, Corynebacterium Diphtheriae, Mumps Virus

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At one time or another, we all become infected and infect other people via person- person contact. Aerosols from sneezing, coughing, talking are important means of transmission. A typical sneeze may eject droplets at 100 m/s. Each respiratory droplet ejected upon sneezing is about 10 nanometers and contains 1-2 bacteria. Single sneeze contains 10k-100k bacteria, millions of viruses during an acute infection. Infectious diseases spread by respiratory transmission are among the most contagious. Measles, mumps, chicken pox, common cold, flu, tb. Lower: less common to find microorganisms unless you are actively infected. Larger particles tend to stay in the upper respiratory tract, harder to go down to lower tract. Windblown dust may carry microbial populations even across continents and oceans oceans. Most microorganisms do not survive long in air but gram+ bacteria (staph spp. and strep spp. ) can survive for extended periods. Gram+ organisms are more resistant to desiccation than gram-, more robust.

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