SOLUTIONS
Barba
Latin for beard
Meryma'at
Egyptian barber commemorated with a statue
Egypt
Country that is credited with being the first to cultivate beauty in an extravagant fashion
Ticinius Mena
Credited with bringing barbering and shaving to Rome in 296 BC
Barber-surgeons
Early practitioners who cut hair, shaved and performed bloodletting and dentistry
Master barber group
early barber employer unions
Journeymen barber groups
Early barber employee unons
A.B. Moler
wrote the first barbering textbook
Chicago 1893
What year did A.B. Moler open the first barer school in America?
Minnesota 1897
Name the first state to pass a barber licensing law and the year in which it was passed?
Ambroise Pare
French barber surgeon who became known as the father of surgery
Tonsorial
related to the cutting, clipping, or trimming of hair with shears or razor
Tonsure
A Shaved patch on the head
,Bacteria
one-celled microorganism, also know as germs or microbes
Nonpthogenic bacteria
beneficial or harmless bacteria that perform many useful functions
Pathogenic bacteria
Harmful, disease producing bacteria
Staphylococci
pus-forming bacteria that grow in bunches or clusters; causes abscesses, pustules,
pimples and boils-MRSA
Streptococci
bacteria are pus-forming organisms that grow in chains and cause infections such as
strep throat, tonsillitis, blood poisioning
Diplococci
bacteria that grow in pairs and cause pneumonia and gonorrhea
Cocci
round-shaped organisms, rarely show active mobility, transmitted in air or dust
Bacilli
short, rod-shaped organisms- diphtheria, tetanus, TB
Spirilla
curved or corkscrew-haped organisms, syphilis, lyme disease
Flagella, cilia
hair-like extensions that propel bacteria through liquid
Active (vegatative) stage
the stage in which bacteria grow and reproduce
Inactive stage
the stag in which bacteria do not grow or reproduce
Mitosis
the division of cells during reproduction into two new cells (daughter cells)
Spore-forming bacteria
certain bacteria that have the ability to form protective spores to survive an inactive
stage- bacilli
, Staphyococci
the most common pus-forming human bacteria
Infection
occurs if the body is unable to cope with the bacteria and their harmful toxins
Pus
the presence of this is a sign of infection
Pus
a fluid that contains white blood cells, dead and living bacteria, waste matter, tissue
elements and body cells
Local infection
indicated by a lesion containing pus and usually appears in a particular area of the body
General infection
results when the blood stream carries the bacteria and their toxins to all parts of the
body
Contagious (communicable)
a disease that may be transmitted by contact
HIV
the virus that causes AIDS
Parasite
plant or animal organisms that live on other living organisms without giving anything in
return
Sepsis
a poisoned state caused by the absorption of pathogenic microorganisms into the
bloodstream
Aseptic
free of disease germs
Subjective symptoms
symptoms that can be felt or experienced only by the person affected- itching, burning
or pain
Objective symptoms
symptom that can be observed by anyone, pimples, boils, swelling or inflammtion