Other Infectious Diseases
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Transcript Other Infectious Diseases
What disease killed 300-500 million
people worldwide but has since been
eradicated from the human
population?
Progression:
› Rash
› Pus-filled blisters
› Disfiguration and/or
blindness
› Death rate = 30%
Man with smallpox; Public Health Images
Library. Source: CDC
The first vaccine
Edward Jenner
1749 - 1823
1967:
WHO announces global
smallpox eradication program.
› Still 15 million new cases a year then
1977:
Last reported naturally occurring
case in Somalia.
› Smallpox is the only disease totally
eradicated in humans
Ring around the rosy,
A pocket full of posies,
Ashes… Ashes,
We all fall down!
Written in London in 1665
Gangrene caused by plague
13 cases reported in Oregon (5 fatal)
since 1970.
Mostly spread from fleas of infected
rodents.
Caused by Clostridium botulinum bacteria
Rare but serious – causes paralysis if left
untreated.
Five types of botulism:
›
›
›
›
›
Foodborne
Wound
Infant
Adult intestinal
Iatrogenic
Symptoms include:
› Double vision, blurred vision, drooping
eyelids, slurred speech, difficulty swallowing,
dry mouth, muscle weakness.
Antitoxin is available for treatment
Proper food handling
› Especially in food preservation
› Be wary of dented, bulging cans
Botulism’s not all bad….
Flu seasons vary from year to year
About 20% of US population infected
every year
› Higher among susceptible populations
Three main types of flu virus: Types A, B & C
› Type A causes the greatest morbidity and
mortality
Example: H1N1 (2009 Epidemic)
Since the late 19th century, four
occurrences of pandemics
› 1889-1891; 1918-1920; 1957-1958; 1968-1969
2009; H1N1
› Was that the pandemic for our time??
Type A cycles every 50-100 years
What’s different about Type A influenza?
20-33% world’s population is infected
with TB
› Majority of the above = “Dormant TB”
Can be dormant for 30 years
› Only 5-10% will become “active” TB
Public.health.oregon.gov
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
Aureus
› Staph bacteria resistant to certain antibiotics
called beta-lactams.
Often appears as pustule or boil
› May think of a spider bite at first.
HA-MRSA
= Health care acquired
› More serious and potentially deadly
CA-MRSA
= Community acquired
› Anyone is at risk
Crowding
Frequent Contact
Antimicrobial
Use
Compromised Skin
(CDC, 2012)
Contaminated Surfaces
and Shared Items
Cleanliness
Newberg, Oregon…
› High schooler spread MRSA through
tattoos, several students infected.
› Mainly spread through unclean needles.
Ebola
Flesh-eating disease
Mad cow
Kissing disease
Giardia
HAV
U.S. Stats
HBV
HCV
25,000 new
infections/yr
43,000 new
infections/yr
17,000 new
infections/yr
Transmission
Ingestion of fecal
matter
Contact w/
infectious body
fluids
Contact w/
infected blood
Severity
Usually no lasting
damage, rarely
fatal
Most fully
recover;
Some develop
liver disease;
~3,000 die / yr
60-70% develop
chronic liver
disease; 1-5% will
die from liver
cancer
Vaccine?
Vaccine available
Vaccine available
No vaccine
Symptoms
CDC, 2012
Fever, fatigue, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting,
abdominal pain, joint pain, jaundice
Gonorrhea
Syphilis