infect
Verb
1 communicate a disease to; "Your children have
infected you with this head cold"
2 contaminate with a disease or microorganism
[syn:
taint] [ant:
disinfect]
3 contaminate with ideas or an ideology; "society
was infected by racism"
4 affect in a contagious way; "His laughter
infects everyone who is in the same room"
English
Verb
- to bring into contact with a substance that can cause illness
(a pathogen)
- to make somebody enthusiastic about one's own passion
- Her passion for dancing has infected me.
Translations
to bring into contact with a substance that can
cause illness
An infection is the detrimental
colonization of a host
organism by a foreign
species. In an
infection, the infecting organism seeks to utilize the
host's
resources to multiply (usually at the expense of the host). The
infecting organism, or
pathogen, interferes with the
normal functioning of the host and can lead to
chronic
wounds,
gangrene,
loss of an infected limb, and even
death. The host's response to
infection is
inflammation. Colloquially,
a pathogen is usually considered a
microscopic
organism though the definition is broader, including
feces,
parasites,
fungi,
viruses,
prions, and
viroids. A
symbiosis between parasite and
host, whereby the relationship is beneficial for the former but
detrimental to the latter, is characterised as
parasitism. The branch of
medicine that focuses
on infections and pathogens is
infectious
disease.
A secondary infection is an infection that occurs
during or following treatment of another already existing primary
infection.
Colonization
Wound colonization
refers to nonreplicating microorganisms within the wound, while in
infected wounds replicating organisms exist and tissue is injured.
All
multicellular
organisms are colonized to some degree by extrinsic organisms,
and the vast majority of these exist in either a
mutualistic or
commensal relationship with
the host. An example of the former would be the
anaerobic
bacteria species which colonize the
mammalian colon,
and an example of the latter would be the various species of
staphylococcus
which exist on human
skin.
Neither of these colonizations would be considered infections. The
difference between an infection and a colonization is often only a
matter of circumstance. Organisms which are non-pathogenic can
become pathogenic under the right conditions, and even the most
virulent organism
requires certain circumstances to cause a compromising infection.
Some colonizing bacteria, such as
Corynebacteria
sp. and
viridans
streptococci, prevent the adhesion and colonization of
pathogenic bacteria and thus have a symbiotic relationship with the
host, preventing infection and speeding
wound
healing.
The variables involved in the outcome of a host
becoming inoculated by a pathogen and the ultimate outcome
include:
As an example, the
staphylococcus species
present on skin remain harmless on the skin, but, when present in a
normally
sterile
space, such as in the capsule of a
joint or the
peritoneum, will multiply
without resistance and create a huge burden on the host.
Occult infection
An occult infection is medical terminology
for a "hidden" infection, that is, one which presents no symptoms.
Dr.
Fran
Giampietro discovered this type, and coined the term "occult
infection" in the late 1930s.
Bacterial or viral
Bacterial and viral infections can both
cause similar symptoms such as
malaise,
fever, and chills. It can be
difficult, even for a doctor to distinguish which is the cause of a
specific infection. It's important to distinguish, because viral
infections cannot be cured by
antibiotics.
abuse,
activate,
adulterate,
afflict,
aggrieve,
alloy,
animate,
befoul,
benasty,
bewitch,
blight,
canker,
charge,
cheapen,
coarsen,
condemn,
confound,
contaminate,
corrupt,
crucify,
curse,
damage,
debase,
debauch,
defile,
deflower,
degenerate,
degrade,
denature,
deprave,
desecrate,
despoil,
destroy,
devalue,
disadvantage,
disease,
disserve,
distort,
distress, do a mischief, do
evil, do ill, do wrong, do wrong by,
doom,
embue,
enliven,
envenom,
exhilarate,
fire,
foul, get into trouble,
harass,
harm,
hex,
hurt,
imbue,
impair,
inform,
infuse,
inject,
injure,
inoculate,
inspire,
inspirit,
irradiate,
jinx,
maltreat,
menace,
mess, mess up,
mistreat,
misuse,
molest,
nasty,
outrage,
persecute,
pervert, play havoc with, play
hob with,
poison,
pollute,
prejudice,
prostitute,
radiumize,
ravage,
ravish,
savage,
scathe,
spirit, spirit up,
sully,
taint,
tarnish,
threaten,
torment,
torture,
twist,
ulcerate,
violate,
vitiate,
vulgarize,
warp,
wound, wreak havoc on,
wrong