Intracellular pathogens. These types of pathogens rely on living host cells to survive and reproduce, making them more challenging to treat with certain types of medications or treatments.
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No. They are microorganisms that cause disease.
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When pathogens enter the body, they begin to cause disease. Path=disease+ gen=to make (or generate).
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Pathogens such as bacteria, viruses, and fungi can directly attack human tissue by invading and replicating within the cells or tissues of the body. This invasion can lead to damage of the host tissue, triggering an immune response and causing symptoms of infection.
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between 41F and 135 F(5 C and 57 C)
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the complement system includes about 20 plasma proteins that normally circulate in the blood. the complement system provides major protection for our body.
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All germs are pathogens but all pathogens is not germs.
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Bacteria and viruses that cause illness are known as pathogens.
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Microbiologists, immunologists, and epidemiologists are scientists who study pathogens. Microbiologists focus on the characteristics and behavior of pathogens, immunologists study the body's immune response to pathogens, and epidemiologists investigate how pathogens spread in populations.
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Pathogens cause Infectious Diseases by pathogens getting into your body and caused harm.
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Pathogens and non-pathogens are alike in that they can both exist in various environments and interact with organisms. However, pathogens have the ability to cause disease in their hosts, while non-pathogens do not typically cause harm.
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Pathogens are any disease carrying or causing microorganism. Pathogens include bacteria and viruses. Pathogens exist in every part of the world. There are no places free of pathogens.
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Yes, pathogens are agents capable of causing infections or some types of diseases. Pathogens are normally on our skin and any objects without causing problems. Not all pathogens succeed in their goal to find a host, but many pathogens do.
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There are many. There are viral pathogens, bacterial pathogens (such as Streptococcus pneumoniae and dozens of others), mycobacteria (tuberculosis), and fungal pathogens, for example
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intracellular pathogens can only replicate inside a host cell, whereas extracellular pathogens can replicate independent of the host
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Emerging Pathogens Institute was created in 2007.
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The four type of pathogens are bacterium, protists, viruses, and fungi. Parasitic worms are NOT pathogens.
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your body produces antigens to fight against the pathogens and imune you agaist diseases.
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transient means to cross over and pathogens are disease causing bacterium or virus so transient pathogens are those which can cause cross infection
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Pathogens are the disease causing agent while antigens are found in the antibodies that fight against the pathogens. So in short, no they aren't the same.
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loveanime says: mucus and cillia trap the pathogens
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Plant Pathogens are organisms in the plants, that can cause plants to become diseased.
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lice, ticks ,roundworm, dracunculus are macroscopic pathogens
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The major reservoirs of pathogens include humans, animals, insects, and the environment. Pathogens can be carried and transmitted by these reservoirs, leading to the spread of diseases. It is important to identify and control these reservoirs to prevent the transmission of pathogens.
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they make you sneeze or cough and when you do that all of the pathogens stay out of your body - Rudo575
pathogens get stuck in mucus or small hair.
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they make you sneeze or cough and when you do that all of the pathogens stay out of your body - Rudo575
pathogens get stuck in mucus or small hair.
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the skin keeps out most pathogens
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There are four major types of human pathogens: -Bacteria
-Viruses
-Fungi
-and Protists
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exogenous pathogens.
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Pathogens are every where. You are breathing them in right now but the mucus in your lungs is preventing you getting ill.
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Some are, some aren't. Parasites are pathogens and can be quite large in some cases.
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They make you bleed to your death so you can't get pathogens.
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Vaccines are for the purpose of disease prevention.
Vaccination is the process of introducing harmless pathogens to the body for a response trigger without an actual infection.
Vaccines are either composed of:
*dead pathogens
*weakened pathogens
*protiens from the target pathogens
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Pathogens fulfill their unique nutritional requirements by attacking red blood cells and thus cause disease. Unlike non-pathogens, which can meet their nutritional requirements by taking advantage of a wider range of sources.
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