A disease producing organism is a pathogen. An invasion of the body by a pathogen is an infection. Although an infection is a generalized name for the body's response to any invasion by any pathogen.
infection
Sickness
infection.
It protects the body against disease by producing antibodies that defends the body.
Myositis is thought to be an autoimmune disease. The body normally fights infections and disease by producing antibodies and white blood cells called lymphocytes in a process called the immune response. In an autoimmune disease.
some people say you can it it by sucking human
The first and biggest line of defense is the skin. This non-discriminatory barrier is also the largest organ of the human body.
There are actually three ways that bacteria can cause disease, although the first two are the most commonly cited. 1. Bacteria can cause disease directly by actually attacking and digesting human cells and tissues. 2. Bacteria can cause disease indirectly by producing harmful by-products that harm surrounding tissues. 3. Bacteria can cause disease indirectly by provoking an immune response. In order for this one to count, the immune response must result in the body's immune system destroying or damaging cells and tissue in its attempt to destroy the bacteria. Some bacteria are capable of damaging the body using all three of these mechanisms.
The answer is....infection
The answer is....infection
Pathogens
In the kidney
The body does prepare itself for future invasion by releasing antibodies against a given organism.
It protects the body against disease by producing antibodies that defends the body.
To avoid overheating of the organism.
Inflammation- the body's response to injury. Infection - the invasion of bacterias , virus ... into our body. Infection is disease caused by a specific inciting organism (virus, bacteria, prion, parasite, etc.). Inflammation is the body's response to an irritation which may be infectious, chemical or autoimmune.
A Vector, (Also called) carrier (Pathol) an organism, esp. an insect, that carries a disease-producing microorganism from one host to another, either within or on the surface of its body.
The body reacts to a vaccine by producing antibodies to protect against the disease.
Active vaccination produces antibodies against the particular organism. These antibodies kill the invading pathogen and protect the body against the disease.
All vaccinations work on the same principle. By injecting into the body a material which is chemically similar to a given disease organism (such as the tuberculosis baccilus) the immune system is activated, and will prepare an immune response to that disease before the actual disease organism ever enters the body. Therefore there is a faster and more effective immune response if the disease is ever actually encountered.