pathogenentry
Pathogenentry is the process by which pathogenic organisms gain access to the internal environment of a host, enabling colonization and infection. It encompasses the initial contact with host surfaces, adherence, breach of barriers, and establishment of replication niches. Entry routes include the respiratory tract (inhalation of aerosols), the gastrointestinal tract (ingestion of contaminated food or water), the genitourinary tract and reproductive tract (sexual contact or contaminated instruments), skin disruption (cuts or abrasions), and mucous membranes such as the conjunctiva. Some pathogens can also cross placental barriers or be transmitted during childbirth.
Barriers resist entry through physical defenses (skin, mucociliary escalator), chemical defenses (low pH, antimicrobial peptides), and
Determinants of successful entry include pathogen attributes (adhesins, invasive enzymes, receptor binding), host factors (receptor availability,
Clinical relevance and prevention: understanding pathogenentry informs infection control, vaccine design, and development of therapeutics that