Common routes include inhalation, ingestion, or through broken skin (wounds/insect bites).
Many animal diseases are , meaning they jump from animals to humans. Key examples include: Rabies (Viral) Anthrax ( Bacillus anthracis ) Lyme Disease ( Borrelia burgdorferi ) Tuberculosis ( Mycobacterium bovis )
The interplay between the innate immune system (inflammation, phagocytes) and adaptive immunity (antibodies, T-cells). 3. Key Veterinary Pathogens by System Veterinary Microbiology and Microbial Disease, ...
Identifying yeast and molds that cause dermatophytosis (ringworm) or systemic infections (Blastomycosis). 2. Pathogenesis: How Diseases Develop
Differentiating between modified-live, killed, and recombinant vaccines to build herd or individual immunity. 6. One Health & Zoonoses acid-fast organisms (like Mycobacterium )
Pasteurella multocida (Bovine/Porcine pneumonia), Equine Influenza, Kennel Cough complex.
Understanding the differences between Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, acid-fast organisms (like Mycobacterium ), and wall-less bacteria ( Mycoplasma ). focusing on the Baltimore classification system.
How DNA and RNA viruses hijack host cells, focusing on the Baltimore classification system.