Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
Epidemics and pandemics WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY

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conditions. Inadequate sanitation has and continues to be the
breeding ground for the bacteriaand virusesthat can sweep
through populations. The gathering of people in the burgeon-
ing cities of seventeenth and eighteenth century Europe lead to
a series of epidemics. These included typhus, typhoid fever,
plague, smallpox, dysentery, and cholera. Outbreaks are less
of a problem in modern day cities, due to better sanitation
conditions and standards of housing. However, in underdevel-
oped areas of the world, or even in the developed world where
sanitation and housing conditions are deficient, such diseases
are still present.
Epidemics and pandemics can be so devastating that
they can alter the course of history. An example is the Black
Plague that spread through Europe and Britain in the seven-
teenth century. An estimated one-third of the population of
Europe was killed, and cities such as London became nearly
deserted, as those who could afford to do so fled the city. In
the Crimean War (1853–1856), more than 50,000 soldiers died
of typhus, while only 2,000 soldiers were actually killed in
battle. As a final example, the spread of the plague to the New

World by contaminated blankets aboard French sailboats that
docked at Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1746, lead to the decima-
tion of the aboriginal inhabitants of North America.
Within the past several decades, there has been an
increasing recognition that disease that were previously
assumed to be of genetic or other, nonbacterial or nonviral ori-
gin are in fact caused by microorganismshas lead to the
recognition that there may be an epidemic or pandemic or mal-
adies such as stomach ulcers and heart disease. These diseases
differ from other bacterial and viral epidemics and pandemics,
because they do not appear and fade over a relatively short
time. Rather, the stomach ulcers caused by the bacterium
Helicobacter pyloriand the heart disease caused by the reac-
tion of the immune system to infection by the bacterium
Chlamydiaare so-called chronic infections. These infections
are present for a long time, essentially causing a non-stop pan-
demic of the particular malady.

See alsoBacteria and bacterial infections; Bubonic plague;
Flu, Great flu epidemic of 1918

A painting depicting the effect of an epidemic (in this case, the plague in Florence, Italy).

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