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You have learned about the bubonic plague in social studies class, how is it transmitted?
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Bacterial Infections and Viral Infections
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Unicellular, living organisms Can be helpful to humans Can be killed with antibiotic medication Reproduce on their own - asexually Infectious agents that can make people sick Can Cause: fever, fatigue, and general malaise Nonliving, do not have cells Need a “host” organism Always harmful Antiviral medication will slow reproduction, but cannot destroy virus Smaller than bacteria Examples: tetanus, cholera, staphylococcus, STDs (syphilis, gonorrhea), tuberculosis, pneumonia, bubonic plague Examples: common cold, chicken pox, influenza, Ebola, HIV/AIDS Video
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There are three forms of the Plague ◦ Bubonic (most common) ◦ Septicemic ◦ Pneumonic
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Fatality 30% - 60% if left untreated Transmission ◦ Yersinia Pestis bacteria Zoonotic bacteria – transmitted from animals (usually fleas) to humans The bacteria enters at the bite and travels through the lymphatic system and begins replication in the nearest lymph node Major Outbreaks ◦ First recorded – Byzantine Empire estimated 25 – 50 million dead ◦ Second – 1340 – 1400 Europe Originated in China and spread to Italy and throughout Europe Killed about 20 million ◦ Third – mid 19 th century began in Asia estimated 10 million deaths
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Symptoms ◦ Incubation period – 3 to 7 days ◦ Flu-like symptoms: sudden onset fever, chills, head and body- aches and weakness, vomiting, and nausea ◦ Bubo – the lymph nodes become inflamed, tense and painful, they can even become open sores Treatment ◦ Historically: A good diet, rest, and relocation for clean air The movement of infected patients actually caused the Plague to spread ◦ Now: Antibiotics and supportive therapy are effective if the patient is diagnosed in time Isolation to stop the spread Vaccinations have been available in the past but were not deemed effective
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Fatality Rate 50% average ◦ Fatality rates vary from outbreak to outbreak 25% to 90% Outbreaks ◦ Initial - villages in Central Africa as well as Sudan in 1976 ◦ Most recent - West Africa in major urban and rural areas 2014 Transmission ◦ Human-to-human via direct contact with the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected people ◦ People remain infectious as long as their blood contains the virus
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Symptoms ◦ Incubation period – the time interval from infection to onset of symptoms can be between 2 and 21 days ◦ Humans are not infectious until symptoms develop ◦ First symptoms: fever, fatigue, muscle pain, headache, and sore throat ◦ Followed by: vomiting, diarrhea, rash, impaired kidney and liver function, and in some cases internal and external bleeding Treatment ◦ Supportive care (rehydration with oral or intravenous fluids) ◦ Treatment of symptoms ◦ Currently no licensed vaccines however 2 potential vaccines are undergoing human safety testing
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Fatality ◦ World-wide and estimated 39 million people have died from HIV/AIDS ◦ An estimated 35 million people were living with HIV in 2013 3.2 million of these are children 2.1 million of these were new infections Origination ◦ The first recognized case of AIDS occurred in the USA in 1980s ◦ There is still no clear answer on where HIV/AIDS came from Scientists/doctors believe it was transmitted from Chimpanzees, as it is very similar to SIV (Simian Immunodeficiency Virus)
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Symptoms ◦ Symptoms vary from patient to patient and throughout different stages of the virus Stages ◦ Early Stage – time immediately following infection, may experience flu-like symptoms "worst flu ever" this is the body's reaction to the infection ◦ Clinical Latency No symptoms Virus slowly replicates Still able to transmit virus to others ◦ Progression to AIDS The virus has weakened the immune system and patients may experience many symptoms The symptoms may actually be caused by various opportunistic infections
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Transmission ◦ HIV can be transmitted if you come into contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person Unprotected sex IV drug use Child birth (although less common) ◦ AIDS is not transmitted, it is the term used to identify late stage HIV Treatment ◦ Originally doctors did not know how to treat HIV/AIDS and many people died from opportunistic infections ◦ Today many people are living with HIV/AIDS and are managing the disease for decades Antiviral medications can put the viral load (amount of HIV/AIDS in the blood of an infected person) to such low levels that they are undetectable ◦ There currently is no cure and no vaccine
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Wash hands often Cover your mouth when sneezing or coughing Take proper care of cuts/wounds
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Not all bacteria will cause illness Some positives of bacteria ◦ Help with digestion ◦ Used in wine making, backing, pickling, culturing of yogurt and cheese Treatment of water Fermentation of ethanol and biogas Commercial and industrial production Used in Science - biotechnology, genetics and molecular biology
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What type of infection (bacterial or viral) is caused by a living thing?
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World Health Organization ◦ http://www.who.int/en/ http://www.who.int/en/ Center for Disease Control ◦ http://www.cdc.gov http://www.cdc.gov AIDS.gov ◦ http://www.aids.gov http://www.aids.gov
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