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MI025 : “Modern Plagues” Instructor: John Boothroyd, Ph.D. Professor of Microbiology and Immunology phone 723-7984 email: [email protected] Summary. In this “Freshman Seminar”, we will discuss the impact of modern plagues on the world, a subject that could fill volumes. My goals for all students are that by the end of the course you will: -think critically; i.e., look at any health issue in the media critically and think, “what are the data behind that...?” -have an appreciation for the importance of infectious diseases in all aspects of the world and especially from the view of humans. -understand the factors that influence the emergence and, one hopes, eventual control of a given disease. -become an expert in one disease. -improve your abilities to write and present effectively. Logistics. Enrollment is limited to 16 freshmen. The course will meet twice weekly for about 1.5 hours per meeting. Each session will begin with a presentation on a disease or set of diseases followed by a discussion based on assigned and discovered readings. There is no exam for the course. Readings. There is a course reader and all are expected to have read the relevant section before class to form the basis for discussion. Book Report. [Due Tuesday, May 18] Each student will select a book for reading and writing of a brief book report (3 pages) addressing the strengths and weaknesses of the book. Specifically, please: 1. Summarize the main thesis or theme of the book. 2. Give 6 quotes of hypotheses or conclusions, 3 of which are backed up by solid data and sound logic and 3 of which are not (but the author does not acknowledge this fact). Describe each in a brief paragraph and why you assigned them to one or other of the two categories. 3. Would you recommend the book to your class-mates? Oral Presentations. Each student is expected to give an oral presentation and write one paper (see below) on a “Modern Plague” other than the few I will discuss in the first 7 weeks. I have listed possible topics in the syllabus but there are plenty of others and I am flexible. If there is an infectious disease that particularly catches your fancy, check with me but I will almost certainly agree to adding that to the list. The presentations and papers must not be a clinical description of a disease but should instead be a careful analysis of the aspects that are behind the emergence of this disease as a “modern plague”, and what might be the most effective control measures (and why). ALSO, FIND WHAT IS UNIQUE TO YOUR DISEASE AND FOCUS ON THAT POINT IN YOUR PAPER AND, ESPECIALLY, IN YOUR TALK – WHAT’S THE “TAKE-HOME” LESSON/MESSAGE FOR THIS DISEASE? The oral presentations will be 20 minutes long and begin in the eighth week. Practice sessions will be held with course assistants the week before your presentation. The oral presentations can be in your own style but be sure to BRIEFLY include the following information. Disease: 1. Name of the disease and the causative agent (including etymology). 2. Symptoms/Pathology. 3. Prevalence. 4. Pathogenesis. (What is responsible for the pathology) 5. Treatment. Then discuss the historical background to the disease followed by a discussion of two points you deem most interesting or most important. I will add in my two cents worth at the end of your presentation. I. What are the factors that have led to the current situation. [you can use the list we compile as a way to think about this] II. What are the possible control strategies and which should receive the highest priority: avoidance (behavior, vectors, environment, sanitation, etc.) prophylaxis (vaccine, chemical) diagnosis treatment of symptoms cure infection Exams. There will be no exam for this course. Problem Sets: There will be one problem set. This will be short but should help reinforce the concepts that emerge during our discussions. Group discussion of the problems is allowed but you MUST answer them in your OWN words. Papers. The papers can be on the same subject as the oral presentation. Again, please focus on the factors surrounding the emergence of the disease, and only briefly describe the clinical symptoms. I need three choices (ranked) by April 13. I will then allocate them based on your rankings. A one page proposal summarizing the material to be covered in the paper is then due by 3:15 p.m., Tuesday, May 11 (email is fine). I will then review these and make any comments as to possible changes in scope by early May. The papers should be organized as follows: 1. Summary of the main points (one page, maximum). 2. The biology of the infectious agent. (two pages, maximum) 3. The clinical picture associated with this disease. (two pages maximum) 4. The circumstances that have lead to the emergence of this disease. (eight pages maximum) 5. What steps must be taken to effect control measures. (eight pages, maximum) 6. Bibliography. The papers must be typed, double spaced and should not exceed 15 pages, excluding bibliography and figures. Some may wish to emphasize the reasons behind the emergence of the disease while others may focus on what’s to be done about it. Do not rely on only one or two sources and be sure to search medline for recent information. Also, please be very careful to acknowledge all quotes, citations and ideas! Where you think directly quoting is important, use the following style: As Miller put it, “The resurgence of malaria can be traced to a failure of public health measures and indiscriminate use of insecticides and antimalarial drugs.” (1). or According to Miller, the return of malaria may be to a combination of problems with public health measures and “indiscriminate use of insecticides and anti-malarial drugs.” (1). Insert square brackets into quotes where needed to restore context. Lack of attribution is plagiarism and simple rephrasing does not make the material original (i.e., it is still plagiarism if you take, “The resurgence of malaria can be traced to a failure of public health measures and indiscriminate use of insecticides and anti-malarial drugs.” and rephrase it as, “The failure of public health meaures and indiscriminate use of insecticides and anti-malarial drugs explains the resurgence of malaria.” Be sure to be critical!!!!! Do you buy the argument in articles you read??? Papers are due by the beginning of the last class; i.e., 3:15 p.m., June 3. Severe penalties will occur for late papers! Grades. Class participation (25%), book report (10%), the oral presentation (25%), the problem sets (10%) and the paper (30%) will each count toward the final grade. Syllabus. Microbiology and Immunology “Modern Plagues” Tuesdays and Thursdays 3:15-5:05 Class 1 Intro to course, microbiology, epidemiology. discussion of student presentation topics. Class 2 Smallpox eradication – why so successful? Class 3 Joyce Moser – special seminar on effective written and oral communication. Class 4 Choose books for book report. Class 5 Polio - how to finish eradication. Class 6 HIV – the importance of sex (not what you think). Class 7 HIV - ethical issues of developing treatments for developing countries. Class 8 Influenza - how technology can respond. Class 9 Helicobacter – microbes as causes of chronic disease. Class 9 Malaria – up/down/up – resistance, DDT Class 11 Malaria –the vaccine challenge and the nonlinearity between transmission and disease. Class 12 SARS – proportionate response for a fast emerger? Class 13 Guest Lecture Class 14 BSE/mad cow/vCJD - proportionate response for a slow emerger? Class 15 Biological Warfare - a real risk?? Class 16 student presentations: Sexually Transmitted Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C, Kaposis Sarcoma Herpes Virus, Trichomonas, Herpes [Syphilis, Gonnorhea] Class 17 Student presentations Sexually Transmitted (cont’d) Class 18 student presentations: Contact, Food or Water/Air Borne: Rotavirus, Ebola, Hanta, Cholera, Hepatitis A, [Leprosy, Toxoplasmosis, Group A streptococcus, Candidaisis, E. coli O157H, Shigellosis, Salmonella (various species), Pneumocystis] Class 19 student presentations: Vector Borne: Dengue, Lyme Disease, Sleeping Sickness, River Blindness [Typhus, Bubonic Plague, Chagas’ Disease, Schistosomiasis, Leishmaniasis] Class 20 student presentations Vector Borne (cont’d) Table 1. Classes of Infectious Agents. Kingdom Metazoa Fungi Protozoa Bacteria Viruses Prions Description Multicellular Hyphal and/or yeast forms; sexual reproduction Single celled eukaryotes, nonphotosynthetic Single cells, no nucleus Infectious agent that lacks most of the components necessary for reproduction Infectious agents that lack a genome Examples Worms Candida Malaria Salmonella Smallpox Mad Cow Disease Table 2. Infectious Agents to be Studied. Kingdom Metazoa Class/Family Cestoda Tapeworms Nematoda Roundworms Trematoda Flatworms Genus Taenia Species solium Disease Cysticercosis Onchocerca volvulus River Blindness Schistosoma mansoni japonicum Schistosomiasis/ Bilharzia Fungi Ascomycete Deuteromycete Pneumocystis Candida carinii albicans PCP(pneumonia) Thrush/Candidiasis Protozoa Coccidia Plasmodium Malaria Zoomastigophora Toxoplasma Trypanosoma falciparum vivax ovale malariae gondii brucei cruzi major donovani Yersinia Vibrio Streptococcus pestis cholerae pyogenes Mycobacteriu m Mycobacteriu m tuberculosis Plague Cholera Flesh-eating Disease Toxic-Shock-Like Syndrome Tuberculosis leprae Leprosy Leishmania Bacteria Gram-Negative Gram-Positive Toxoplasmosis Sleeping Sickness Chagas Disease Oriental Sore Kala Azar Viruses Prions Flaviviridae Poxviridae Flavivirus Orthopoxvirus Paramyxoviridae Retroviridae Orthomyxovirida e Picornaviridae Filoviridae Bunyaviridae Morbillivirus Lentivirus Influenzavirus Arenaviridae Herpesviridae Arenavirus Cytomegalovir us Rotavirus ? Reoviridae ? Enterovirus Hantavirus Yellow Fever Variola Vaccinia Rubeola HIV Influenzavirus Yellow Jack Smallpox Cowpox Measles AIDS Flu Poliovirus Ebolavirus Sin Nombre Virus Lassa Human CMV Poliomyelitis Ebola Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome Lassa Fever CMV retinitis CMV inclusion Diarrhea Bovine Spongiform Encephalitis/Mad Cow Disease Scrapie Kuru; CreutzfeldJacob Disease Group A cow sheep human Table 3. Microbiology Terms. Term MHC Definition Major histocompatibility complex: genes that were originally defined based on ability to transplant tissue from one animal to another. Eventually found to encode polymorphic proteins that present antigen to the immune system. Polymorphism Differences in gene or protein sequence that may or may not affect phenotype. Parasite Pathogenesis Sequelae Virulence what causes the pathology phenomena that follow infection disease severity. A few Basics in Epidemiology. Study of disease in GROUPS not individuals. Statistics cannot be applied to individuals only groups. Disease dependent on combination of four factors: H A V E Table 4. Epidemiology Terms: Etiologic Agent Etiologic Agent Etiology Herd Immunity Iceberg Phenomenon Mean Median Prevalence Incidence Range Relative Risk agent that causes a disease causative agent cause immunization protects the unimmunized because transmission falls below sustainable rate. reported cases are fraction of actual number of cases which in turn is a fraction of actual number of asymptomatic infections. arithmetic average (2, 3, 4, 7, 9; mean = 5) value that divides the group in half (4, in the above example) number with a disease/total number in group at a given time number who develop a disease in a given time frame/total number in group at mid-point of the study. lowest to highest value. ratio of incidence in one group compared to another, usually of lower susceptibility. Resources. Web sites: 1. Center for Disease Control in Atlanta (http://www.cdc.gov) has lost of EXTREMELY useful sites. For example, “Emerging Infectious Diseases” is a journal that is published in hard copy and is also available on line. It is at http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid. “Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.” Presents a few short articles and full recent statistics on all major U.S. health problems. This is a definitive, official publication that is very up-to-date. The School of Medicine library also carries hard copies. The website includes a searchable index. 2. Scisearch is a website at Los Alamos National Laboratory that has essentially all science articles indexed. It is accessible through: http://bighorn.lanl.gov:6001/stanford/sciquery.html 3. WHO This has tons of information on disease of global importance. Great source of recent facts and figures. http://www.who.int 4. Pubmed (including Medline). Access to millions of articles in biology and medicine. Citations usually include abstract but not remainder of the article. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/ 5. Lane Library (School of Medicine Library). http://www.med.stanford.edu/lane/ Lots of useful sites including Socrates II. Stanford’s newest database of all library collections. http://sucat.stanford.edu/ 6. ProMed. This is what the web is all about .... an exchange on a daily basis dealing with whatever is deemed hot by “people out there”. The quality is uneven, sometimes completely wrong, but a quick scan will reveal lots of interesting issues. The following is what appears at the end of all ProMed listings and provides information on how to subscribe. “For all requests, send a message to: "[email protected]" To (un)subscribe to the promed list, type: "(un)subscribe promed" 7. GAVI. Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization. http://www.vaccinealliance.org/ This is a recently formed collective of private foundation (e.g. Gates, Rockefeller), Governments, World Bank, WHO, etc. It has ambitious goals and, if it can meet the bureaucratic challenges of such a diverse body, it could have a major impact on world health. 8. American Society of Microbiology (ASM). This is a large organization with many useful links to relevant sites. Their one on biowarfare/bioterrorism is most useful: http://www.asmusa.org/pcsrc/bioprep.htm Books: Recommended: Krause, R.M. 1998. Emerging Infections. Academic Press. New York. A tremendous book with a great mix of scientific rigour and readability. Written by experts in the respective diseases. If you can afford it, buy it! Lederberg, J., Shope, R.E. and Oaks, S.C. (eds.) 1992. “Emerging Infections: Microbial Threats to Health in the United States.” National Academy Press. Washington. [a “blue ribbon” panel presents articles on “Factors in Emergence” and “addressing the Threats”. Unlike most of the other books, this is written by practicing microbiologists. Rhodes, R. “The Deadly Feast.” An extremely compelling book about prion diseases starting with Kuru (a disease associated with cannibalism in Papua New Guinea) and working through to the current debate on bovine spongiform encephalitis (“mad cow disease”) and its possible link to human spongiform encephalitis, Creutzfeld Jacob Disease. It is very readable and, although not written by a scientist, is rigorous and not sensationalistic. Rhodes is a Pullitzer Prize winner for his previous book on the atomic bomb. McNeill, W. 1977. “Plagues and People.” Anchor Books, New York. As the publication date might suggest, this book deals more with the historical plagues than the modern variety. As such, it is an efficient way to delve into the historical context of the most famous plagues and how they came to arise, be recognized and, in most cases, conquered. It was one of the first serious look at the impact of plagues on human development. Garrett, L. 1995. “The Coming Plague.” Virago Press, London. Wills, C. 1997. "Yellow Fever, Black Goddess." Their origin, history and future. Flamingo Press, London. This is a very up-to-date and far less gloomy discussion of many modern plagues with a distinct trend toward population biology. A superb paperback though I need to check its availability in the U.S. Oldstone, M.B.A. 1998. "Viruses, Plagues and History." An excellent and very readable discussion of Lassa, Yellow Fever, Measles, Polio, Ebola, Hantavirus, HIV, BSE and Flu. A very good starting source book. Diamond, J. 1997. "Guns, Germs and Steel." An extremely interesting discussion of how guns, germs and steel (and horses!) have affected development of different societies in the old and new worlds. Ewald, P. 2000. "Plague Time : How Stealth Infections Are Causing Cancers, Heart Disease, and Other Deadly Ailments". An interesting discussion of the role of infection in causing chronic disease. Also, see "Evolution of Infectious Disease" (1994) which presents some interesting ideas about how virulence and transmission are balanced. Alibek, K. 1999. “Biohazard” Random House, NY. An in-depth description of the Soviet biological warfare program by someone high-up in that program. Worth a Look... Karlen, A. 1995. Man and Microbes: Diseases and Plagues in History and Modern Times. Touchstone Press, New York. A well written book that is thoroughly researched and covering a wide range of infectious diseases. It moves from one to the other in thematic ways and is not sensationalistically written. Isada, C., Kasten, B., Goldman, M., Gray, L. and Aberg, J. 1996. Infectious Disease Hanbook. 2nd Edition.. Lexi-comp Inc., Hudson Ohio. This is a no-nonsense reference book for the physician but an excellent, compact reference for keeping near to hand as one embarks on any reading. It presents the facts, nothing but the facts, on all aspects of infectious diseases from symptoms to the organisms, treatments, vaccines, etc. Desowitz, R. 1977. “Who Gave Pinta to the Santa Maria.” Norton & Co. New York. McCormick, J. and Fischer-Hoch, S. 1996. “Level 4: Virus Hunters of the CDC.” Turner Publishing, Atlanta. Biddle, W. 1995. “A Field Guide to Germs.” Henry Holt & Co. New York. A short guide to all the germs you will hear about in this course with a page or two on each that gives the key aspects in a conversational style. Eclectic in its choice of what to tell, it is a very easy, quick reference. Ryan, F. 1993. “The Forgotten Plague.” Little, Brown & Co. Boston. Subtitled, “How the Battle Against Tuberculosis Was Won and Lost.”, this book is a thorough discussion of the battle to control TB, initial successes and its recent resurgence. Nikiforuk, A. 1991. “Fourth Horseman - A short history of epidemics, plagues, famines and other scourges.” Evans & Co. New York. A discussion of factors that influence several famous diseases through the millenia. Curtin, P. D. 1989. “Death by Migration- Europe’s encounter with the tropical world in the nineteenth century” Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Quantitative study of the relocation costs among European soldiers in the tropics. Part of the book discusses what Europeans at the time thought the causes of death among the soldiers were and how it ultimately influenced the practice of medicine. Leavitt, J. 1996. “Typhoid Mary- captive to the public’s health” Beacon Press, Boston. Interesting look at the case of Mary Mallon AKA “typhoid Mary” and the tensions between personal liberties and public safety. Ryan, F. 1997. “Virus X-tracking the new killer plagues out of the present and into the future.” Little, Brown and co. Boston. Shilts, R. 1987. “And The Band Played On” St. Martin’s press, NY. Historical analysis of how the political, medical and social institutions influenced the spread of the AIDS epidemics. Rothman, S. 1994. “Living in the Shadow of Death- Tuberculosis and the Social Experience of Illness in American History” Basic Books, NY. (and lots more!) Textbooks: Friedman, G. 1994. “Primer of Epidemiology.” 4th Edition. McGraw-Hill Inc., New York. Just what the name says, this is a short text-book that teaches the essentials of epidemiology. It has more than most might want but for checking essentials of how casecontrol studies are really done (or should be done), it provides an excellent introduction. Jekel, J., Elmore, J. and Katz, D. 1996. “Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Preventive Medicine.” W.B. Saunders Co., Philadelphia. A textbook of intermediate length and detail. Concise but useful guide for the newcomer. Brooks, G., Butel, J. and Ornston, N. 1995. “Jawetz, Melnick and Adelberg’s Medical Microbiology. 20th Edition.”. Appleton and Lange, Norwalk, Connecticut. A classic that is a serious but approachable textbook in infectious diseases for use as a more complete resource on this subject than the Infectious Disease Handbook. Includes chapters on microbial metabolism, cultivation, microbial genetics and immunology as well as the full spectrum of diseases discussed here. ....plus many others in Lane and Falconer Libraries!