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Emerging Diseases Lecture 1:

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Presentation on theme: "Emerging Diseases Lecture 1:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Emerging Diseases Lecture 1:
Historical Ideas About Infectious Diseases 1.1 Overview 1.2 Historical Ideas About Infectious Disease Supernatural B. Humoral C. Miasma D. Germs

2 1.1 Overview: Types of Diseases There are many types
Nutritional or dietary diseases-scurvy, or vitamin C deficiency Genetic diseases-hemophilia Behavioral diseases-addictions such as alcoholism Mental illnesses-bipolar disorder Infectious diseases-you can catch them from someone or something-BIOL 119 Emerging Diseases is about this type of disease only!! 

3 1.2: Some Historical Ideas About the Causes of Infectious Disease
Supernatural – the anger of the gods Humoral – balance of body fluids Miasma - bad air Germs – microscopic particles called germs because they can “germinate” like a plant seed These four have been historically important.

4 of disease-an early idea
A. Supernatural origin of disease-an early idea Not a useful idea

5 B. Humoral Greek physician Hippocrates formulated “humoral” medicine or “humorism” Body fluids were known as “humors” When humors got out of balance-disease followed The four humors were yellow bile, black bile, phlegm and blood They were connected to “elements” earth, air, fire, water

6 Humoral Hypothesis Humor = body fluid
Hippocrates Humoral Hypothesis Humor = body fluid Mood, personality are determined by your own individual mix of humors Disruption leads to illness

7 Restoring the balance of Humors
Many things might force the humors out of balance- The important thing was to restore balance “bleeding” or “bloodletting” was a key treatment Used up until about 1900 for almost any ailment including hemorrhage There were other treatments to adjust other humors

8 Hippocrates is honored as the founder of the western medical profession
He lived and practiced around 400 BCE Main contribution was the idea that disease had natural causes-not supernatural-so physicians actually had a chance to cure disease He was the first major figure to draw a distinction between medicine and religion Hippocratic medicine is very different from modern medicine but this was a huge step forward His ideas persisted for over 2000 years in Western society

9 C. Miasma Humorism did not explain everything well
For example-it was easy to see that certain diseases were more prevalent in areas with bad sanitation and this was hard to explain based only on the balance of humors It was proposed that rotting sewage and other materials gave off a polluted vapor or mist that caused various diseases when inhaled The mist was called a “miasma” “Bad air”, “Night air”, “nebula”, “malaria” or “Cold air” were other names for this horrible agent “Miasma” explanation for disease seemed to fit the facts

10 Miasma idea about infectious disease
Disease is associated with bad air-”miasmas” with a sort of spiritual or ghostly component-not a physical thing

11 “Miasmas” resulted from the chemical
breakdown of living material 19th Century cities were a good place for this

12 Sanitarians were determined to clean up the filthy cities

13 Sanitarian movement of the 19th Century
19th Century cities had many diseases of filth Sanitarians operated under the idea that cleanup would reduce miasmas and therefore disease But even if that didn’t work everyone was better off if the cities were cleaner They convinced city governments to act Built privies and sewers, paved streets and tried to keep them clean

14 Sanitarian ideas were fuzzy
They thought disease resulted spontaneously from garbage, filth and dirt Thought chemical interactions produced miasmas and no host was necessary for miasmas to proliferate But they thought cleaning up was generally a good idea And some key medical people of the mid-1800s agreed Cleaning up the garbage, sewage and dirt did make a difference! Sanitarians helped to improve public health! Their ideas were wrong but their actions were helpful.

15 D. Germ Theory of Disease Many other 19th Century medical professionals suspected that something more defined than a miasma was responsible for some diseases The “contagionists” felt that physical things caused disease-not mysterious vapors Actually an old idea (smallpox germ warfare used against Native Americans) But this explanation ran into trouble because no one could see or demonstrate the existence of these physical things Improvements in microscopes and in science methodology changed all that in the second half of the 19th Century

16 Louis Pasteur Showed that microorganisms always occur in infectious disease or in spoilage And that they always come from pre-existing microbes- not miasmas Specific microbes are always associated with specific diseases

17 Robert Koch Anthrax Koch showed that germs caused diseases
Koch’s Postulates-rules for demonstrating causation Endospores of anthrax are very stable- A bioterror weapon used against the US in 2001

18 In 1854 Dr. John Snow halted a deadly cholera outbreak in London by preventing contact with contaminated water –showed something physical must be involved

19 Semmelweis-”The Savior of Mothers”
Puerperal fever or childbed fever Semmelweis notices higher incidence when doctors deliver-not midwives Suspects dirty hands or instruments Cleaning instruments, hands and clothing reduced post partum infections

20 Lister-Antiseptic Surgery
Used strong chemicals to kill germs “Carbolic acid” = phenol = paint stripper “Antiseptics” = chemicals that kill germs on surfaces Achieved a significant reduction in post-surgical complications and infections

21 The Germ Theory of Disease is the accepted theory today.
Through the work of Pasteur, Koch, Snow, Semmelweis, Lister and many others The Germ Theory of Disease Became accepted by scientific and medical community around 1900. The Germ Theory of Disease is the accepted theory today. Infectious diseases are caused by germs!

22 IT WORKS! Why is the Germ Theory of Disease
so successful and still so widely accepted? Because it is based on a lot of evidence and……… IT WORKS! If it didn’t work we would have to come up with a new theory.

23 Types of Germs and Their Diseases
Parasites-tapeworms, amoebas, protozoa Fungi- athlete’s foot, yeast infections Bacteria-anthrax, syphilis, Staph infections Viruses- AIDS, cervical cancer (HPV), influenza Sub-viral- Mad Cow, Hepatitis D These are just some examples of five important types of germs


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