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Fighting an infection for Children by Orisakolade Orisadamilare. A virus infects the soft tissue of the body causing it to mutate. These cells begin to transform into a similar virus to the original invader. Once transformed they are then free to infect other cells on there mission of destruction.
Fighting an infection for Children by Orisakolade Orisadamilare. A virus infects the soft tissue of the body causing it to mutate. These cells begin to transform into a similar virus to the original invader. Once transformed they are then free to infect other cells on there mission of destruction.
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Fighting an infection for Children by Orisakolade Orisadamilare. A virus infects the soft tissue of the body causing it to mutate. These cells begin to transform into a similar virus to the original invader. Once transformed they are then free to infect other cells on there mission of destruction.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Formati disponibili
Scarica in formato PPTX, PDF, TXT o leggi online su Scribd
A virus infects the soft tissue of the body. ëhe virus starts to infect the other cells in the tissue causing them to mutate. ëhese cells begin to transform into a similar virus to the original alien invader. ánce transformed they are then free to infect other cells on there mission of destruction. ëhese converted viruses travel through the blood infecting other healthy cells. ooner or later one of the virus drones ventures into the Lymph Node, where the B Cells live. ëhe B Cells begin to buzz around the virus as they search for the perfect fit. As the virus ventures further into the Lymph Node it stumbles on different B Cells. Each B Cell tries to attach itself to the virus. Within every Lymph node there are billions of B Cells, and one that fits the invading virus perfectly. hntil finally one B Cell attaches itself to the virus. ëhe B Cell then begins to download vital information from the virus. ëhe B Cell drags the virus deep within the lymph Node, and with the information Downloaded from the virus, the B Cell begins to multiply identical cells of itself. ëhe B Cell then breaks itself off from the virus, but leaves an antibody attached to it. ëhen the identical cells use the downloaded information to produce more antibodies. ëhen even more antibodies. 4ore and more antibodies continue to be produced. hntil billions of antibodies are ready to meet the invading viruses head-on. ëhe antibodies swarm out of the lymph node to seek out the alien viruses and attach ëhemselves to the intruders. ëhey travel through the blood to complete their duties, making there way to the infected tissue. ánce the antibodies have attached themselves to all the viruses, the bodies secret weapon comes into play, the 4acrophage. ëhe 4acrophage looks for the antibodies attached to the virus then devours both Antibody and virus. As long as the virus has the antibodies still attached the 4acrophage will hunt them all down and destroy them. ëhe 4acrophage follows the trail of viruses back to the infected tissue devouring all virus cells on the way. ëhe 4acrophage devour the rest of the viruses cleaning the tissue of the infection. 4eanwhile allowing the good cells to reproduce. Now that the virus is gone the cells in the tissue are able to reproduce to full health, and with the 4acrophage and the antibodies ready for a fight, that virus will not be giving the body any real problems again.