By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Identify common bacterial, viral, and protozoan diseases
  • 2Distinguish innate and acquired, active and passive immunity
  • 3Describe HIV/AIDS transmission, progression, and prevention
  • 4Explain cancer types, causes, and the role of oncogenes
  • 5Describe commonly abused drugs and their effects
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Why this chapter matters
Health depends on the body's defences. Understanding common diseases, the immune system, AIDS, cancer, and drug abuse explains how the body fights pathogens, why vaccines work, and how diseases and addictions can be prevented and treated.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Human Health and Diseases

'The IMMUNE SYSTEM is the body's personal army — it distinguishes SELF from NON-SELF and eliminates threats with remarkable precision.'

1. Chapter Overview

This chapter explores HEALTH and DISEASE from a biological perspective. Topics include: COMMON HUMAN DISEASES (bacterial, viral, protozoan, helminthic — their pathogens, symptoms, and prevention), the IMMUNE SYSTEM (innate and acquired immunity, active and passive immunity, B-cells and T-cells, antibodies), AIDS (HIV structure, transmission, progression, prevention), CANCER (types, causes, detection, treatment), and DRUGS AND ALCOHOL ABUSE (types of drugs, effects, addiction, prevention).


2. Common Human Diseases

Bacterial Diseases

DiseasePathogenTransmissionSymptomsPrevention
TyphoidSalmonella typhiContaminated food/waterHigh fever (up to 2 weeks), abdominal pain, intestinal perforationSanitation, vaccination
PneumoniaStreptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzaeAirborne dropletsFever, chills, cough with phlegm, difficulty breathingVaccination
DysenteryShigella, E. coliContaminated food/waterDiarrhoea with blood/mucusHygiene
TetanusClostridium tetaniWound infectionMuscle spasms, lockjawVaccination

Viral Diseases

DiseasePathogenTransmissionSymptoms
Common coldRhinovirusAirborne dropletsNasal congestion, sore throat, cough
InfluenzaInfluenza virusAirborne dropletsFever, body aches, fatigue
DengueDengue virus (Flavivirus)Mosquito (Aedes)High fever, severe joint pain, rash, haemorrhagic fever
Hepatitis BHBV (Hepadnavirus)Blood, body fluidsLiver inflammation, jaundice, cirrhosis, cancer
RabiesRabies virusAnimal bite (dog)Hydrophobia, paralysis, FATAL once symptoms appear

Protozoan and Helminthic Diseases

DiseasePathogenVector/TransmissionSymptoms
MalariaPlasmodium (P. vivax, P. falciparum, etc.)Anopheles mosquitoFever alternating with chills, anaemia
AmoebiasisEntamoeba histolyticaContaminated food/waterAbdominal pain, dysentery
AscariasisAscaris lumbricoides (roundworm)Contaminated soil/foodAbdominal pain, malnutrition
Filariasis (Elephantiasis)Wuchereria bancroftiCulex mosquitoLymphatic obstruction, swelling of limbs

3. The Immune System

Innate Immunity (Non-Specific)

  • PRESENT AT BIRTH — provides FIRST LINE OF DEFENCE.
  • Barriers: Physical (skin, mucus), Physiological (stomach acid, lysozyme in tears), Cellular (phagocytes — neutrophils, macrophages), Inflammatory response.

Acquired Immunity (Specific)

  • DEVELOPED after exposure to a pathogen — has MEMORY.
  • Components: B-cells (BONE MARROW-derived) and T-cells (THYMUS-derived).
    • B-cells: Produce ANTIBODIES (humoral immunity). Memory B-cells provide long-term immunity.
    • T-cells: CELL-MEDIATED immunity. Helper T-cells (CD4⁺) ACTIVATE B-cells. Killer T-cells (CD8⁺) DESTROY infected cells.

Active vs Passive Immunity

TypeAntibody SourceDurationOnsetExample
Active (Natural)Self — after infectionLONG (memory)SLOWRecovering from COVID-19
Active (Artificial)Self — after vaccinationLONG (memory)SLOWVaccination
Passive (Natural)Mother to foetus/infant (via placenta/milk)SHORTFASTMaternal antibodies in newborn
Passive (Artificial)External source — ready-made antibodiesSHORTFASTAnti-tetanus serum, snake antivenom

4. AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome)

  • Pathogen: HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus — a RETROVIRUS).
  • Structure: RNA genome + REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE enzyme (converts RNA → DNA).
  • Transmission: (1) Sexual contact. (2) Blood transfusion / contaminated needles. (3) Mother to child (during pregnancy, birth, or breastfeeding).
  • NOT transmitted by: Casual contact, hugging, sharing utensils, mosquito bites.

Progression

  1. Acute stage (2-4 weeks): Flu-like symptoms. High viral load.
  2. Chronic stage (latency) : Virus replicating slowly. CD4⁺ count GRADUALLY decreases. Patient MAY appear healthy for years.
  3. AIDS (CD4⁺ count < 200 cells/μL): Immune system SEVERELY compromised. OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS (tuberculosis, pneumonia, certain cancers).

Prevention and Treatment

  • No CURE — but ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY (ART) controls viral replication.
  • Prevention: SAFE SEX (condoms), needle exchange programmes, blood screening, preventing mother-to-child transmission.
  • 'The ELISA test detects HIV ANTIBODIES. The PCR test detects HIV RNA directly — used for early diagnosis.'

5. Cancer

Types

  • Benign: LOCALISED — does NOT spread. Usually REMOVABLE by surgery.
  • Malignant: INVASIVE — spreads to surrounding tissues. CAN metastasise (spread via blood/lymph).
  • Carcinomas: Epithelial cells (lungs, breast, colon, skin). Sarcomas: Connective tissue (bone, muscle). Leukaemias: Blood-forming tissues. Lymphomas: Lymphatic system.

Causes

  • Chemical carcinogens: Tobacco smoke (lung cancer), asbestos (mesothelioma).
  • Physical carcinogens: UV radiation (skin cancer), ionising radiation.
  • Biological: Oncogenic viruses (HPV → cervical cancer, Hepatitis B → liver cancer).

Detection and Treatment

  • Detection: MRI, CT scan, biopsy, PET scan, mammography, Pap smear.
  • Treatment: Surgery, RADIATION THERAPY, CHEMOTHERAPY, IMMUNOTHERAPY, TARGETED THERAPY.
  • Two key genes: ONCOGENES (promote cancer — mutated proto-oncogenes). TUMOUR SUPPRESSOR GENES (p53 — prevent cancer). 'Cancer develops when MULTIPLE mutations accumulate.'

6. Drugs and Alcohol Abuse

Commonly Abused Substances

SubstanceSourceEffectHealth Risks
Opioids (heroin, morphine)Opium poppyPAIN RELIEF, EUPHORIAAddiction, respiratory depression, overdose DEATH
Cannabinoids (marijuana, hashish)Cannabis sativaRELAXATION, altered perceptionImpaired memory, addiction, lung damage (if smoked)
CocaineCoca plantSTIMULANT — intense EUPHORIACardiovascular damage, addiction, stroke
AmphetaminesSyntheticSTIMULANTInsomnia, paranoia, cardiac damage
BarbituratesSyntheticDEPRESSANTSedation, overdose (especially with alcohol)
LSDErgot fungusHALLUCINOGEN — altered perceptionBad trips, flashbacks, psychological effects
AlcoholFermented grainsDEPRESSANTLiver cirrhosis, addiction, accidents

Addiction and Dependence

  • Psychological dependence: CRAVING — the substance becomes CENTRAL to the person's life.
  • Physical dependence: WITHDRAWAL SYMPTOMS when the substance is stopped (nausea, sweating, tremors, anxiety).

Prevention

  • Education about consequences. Building SELF-ESTEEM and COPING SKILLS. PEER EDUCATION. Identifying EARLY WARNING SIGNS. Seeking professional HELP (counselling, rehabilitation).

7. Comparison Table: Bacterial vs Viral Diseases

FeatureBacterialViral
Pathogen typeBacteria (prokaryote)Virus (non-living outside host)
Treatable with antibiotics?YESNO (except some antivirals)
Vaccine available?Some (tetanus, typhoid)Some (hepatitis, rabies, flu)
ExamplesTyphoid, Tetanus, PneumoniaAIDS, Common cold, Dengue

8. Common Mistakes

  1. Antibiotics do NOT work against viruses: Antibiotics kill BACTERIA. They are USELESS against viral infections like the common cold or flu.
  2. AIDS is NOT transmitted by casual contact: Shaking hands, hugging, or sharing food with an HIV-positive person is SAFE.
  3. Cancer is NOT a single disease: There are over 200 types of cancer — each with different causes, treatments, and prognoses.
  4. Not all tumours are cancerous: BENIGN tumours do NOT spread or invade other tissues — they are NOT cancer.

9. CBSE Exam Focus

  1. Common diseases — bacterial (typhoid, pneumonia), viral (common cold, hepatitis), protozoan (malaria, amoebiasis)
  2. Immune system — innate vs acquired, active vs passive immunity, B-cells and T-cells
  3. AIDS — HIV structure, transmission, progression, prevention, diagnosis (ELISA)
  4. Cancer — types (benign vs malignant), carcinogens, oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes
  5. Drugs and alcohol abuse — types of drugs, effects, prevention

10. Self-Test

Q1: Differentiate between active and passive immunity. A1: Active: Body PRODUCES its own antibodies after exposure to antigen (infection or vaccination). LONG-LASTING. Passive: READY-MADE antibodies are transferred (mother to child, anti-snake venom). IMMEDIATE but SHORT-LIVED.

Q2: Which cells are primarily destroyed by HIV? What is the consequence? A2: HIV primarily destroys HELPER T-CELLS (CD4⁺ T-cells). These cells are CRUCIAL for activating both B-cells (antibody production) and killer T-cells. Their destruction leads to PROGRESSIVE IMMUNE DEFICIENCY — the hallmark of AIDS.

Q3: Name the vector and pathogen for malaria. A3: Vector: Female Anopheles MOSQUITO. Pathogen: Plasmodium (protozoan) — P. vivax, P. falciparum, etc.

Q4: What is the difference between benign and malignant tumours? A4: Benign: LOCALISED, does NOT spread, usually REMOVABLE. Malignant: INVASIVE, spreads to neighbouring tissues and can METASTASISE to distant sites — LIFE-THREATENING.

Q5: Name TWO bacterial and TWO viral diseases. A5: Bacterial: Typhoid, Pneumonia, Tetanus (any 2). Viral: Common cold, AIDS, Influenza, Hepatitis B (any 2).


11. Conclusion

Human health and disease is about the BODY'S DEFENCES and their FAILURE:

  • IMMUNE SYSTEM: 'A COMPLEX network of cells, tissues, and organs — working together to defend the body against pathogens.'
  • AIDS: 'A MODERN PANDEMIC — caused by a virus that attacks the immune system itself. Preventable but not curable.'
  • CANCER: 'Uncontrolled cell division — caused by genetic mutations. Early detection SAVES lives.'
  • 'Understanding our immune system is the first step to understanding how to keep our bodies HEALTHY and fight disease.'

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Immune cells
B-cells (humoral, antibodies); T-cells (cell-mediated)
Helper T (CD4) activate, killer T (CD8) destroy infected cells.
Active vs passive immunity
Active: own antibodies, long-lasting; passive: ready-made, short-lived
Vaccination is active; antivenom is passive.
Cancer genes
Oncogenes promote cancer; tumour suppressor genes (p53) prevent it
Cancer arises from accumulated mutations.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Using antibiotics against viral infections
Antibiotics kill bacteria; they have no effect on viruses like the common cold or flu.
WATCH OUT
Thinking AIDS spreads by casual contact
HIV spreads via sexual contact, blood, and mother to child, not by hugging, sharing food, or mosquito bites.
WATCH OUT
Treating all tumours as cancer
Benign tumours are localised and non-invasive; only malignant tumours are cancerous.
WATCH OUT
Calling cancer a single disease
There are over 200 types of cancer with different causes, treatments, and outcomes.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM· Immunity
Differentiate between active and passive immunity.
Show solution
In active immunity the body produces its own antibodies after exposure to an antigen (infection or vaccination); it is slow to develop but long-lasting. In passive immunity ready-made antibodies are received from outside (mother to child, or antivenom); it acts immediately but is short-lived.
Q2MEDIUM· AIDS
Which cells does HIV primarily destroy, and what is the consequence?
Show solution
HIV destroys helper T-cells (CD4+). Since these activate B-cells and killer T-cells, their loss causes progressive immune deficiency, the hallmark of AIDS.
Q3EASY· Disease
Name the vector and pathogen for malaria.
Show solution
Vector: female Anopheles mosquito. Pathogen: Plasmodium (a protozoan, e.g. P. vivax, P. falciparum).
Q4MEDIUM· Cancer
What is the difference between benign and malignant tumours?
Show solution
Benign tumours are localised and do not spread, so they are usually removable. Malignant tumours invade nearby tissues and can metastasise to distant sites, making them life-threatening.
Q5EASY· Recall
Name two bacterial and two viral diseases.
Show solution
Bacterial: typhoid, pneumonia, tetanus (any two). Viral: common cold, AIDS, hepatitis B, influenza (any two).

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Bacterial (typhoid, pneumonia, tetanus), viral (cold, dengue, hepatitis B, rabies), protozoan (malaria, amoebiasis).
  • Innate immunity is non-specific; acquired immunity is specific with memory.
  • B-cells give humoral immunity (antibodies); T-cells give cell-mediated immunity.
  • Active immunity (own antibodies, lasting) vs passive (ready-made, short).
  • HIV is a retrovirus that destroys CD4+ T-cells; spreads by sex, blood, mother-to-child.
  • Benign vs malignant tumours; carcinogens chemical, physical, biological; oncogenes and p53.
  • Drugs: opioids, cannabinoids, cocaine, alcohol; cause psychological and physical dependence.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 6-8 marks across the chapter

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Immunity3-51Innate/acquired, active/passive, B and T cells
AIDS / cancer31HIV progression and cancer biology
Diseases / drugs2-31Common diseases and drug abuse
Prep strategy
  • Tabulate diseases with pathogen and vector
  • Compare immunity types in a table
  • Learn HIV transmission and progression stages
  • Know cancer types, carcinogens, and key genes

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Vaccination

Understanding immunity underlies vaccines that prevent diseases like polio and hepatitis.

Public health

Knowledge of disease transmission guides sanitation, vector control, and HIV prevention.

Cancer care

Early detection and understanding of carcinogens improve cancer prevention and treatment.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Use disease tables with pathogen, vector, symptoms
  2. Compare immunity types clearly
  3. State HIV transmission routes and what it attacks
  4. Distinguish benign from malignant tumours

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Explore the molecular basis of antibody diversity and clonal selection.
  • Examine how oncogenes and tumour suppressor mutations drive carcinogenesis.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 12 Biology examHigh
NEET BiologyVery High

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

HIV specifically infects and destroys helper T-cells (CD4+ cells), which act as the coordinators of the immune response. They activate B-cells to make antibodies and stimulate killer T-cells to destroy infected cells. As HIV replicates over years, the CD4+ count steadily falls. When it drops below about 200 cells per microlitre, the immune system can no longer mount effective responses, so the patient develops AIDS and becomes vulnerable to opportunistic infections and cancers that a healthy immune system would normally control.

Antibiotics work by targeting structures and processes specific to bacteria, such as cell-wall synthesis or bacterial ribosomes. The common cold is caused by viruses (rhinoviruses), which are not cells and lack these bacterial targets; they replicate using the host cell's machinery. Therefore antibiotics cannot harm them. Misusing antibiotics for viral illnesses provides no benefit and contributes to antibiotic resistance. Viral infections are managed with rest, supportive care, or specific antiviral drugs and vaccines where available.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 30 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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