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THE STORY OF SMALLPOX HISTORY OF SMALLPOX • As early as 10,000 BC • Found on Egyptian mummies • During the 1700’s around half a million European people died each year • In the 1900’s smallpox killed 300-500 million people EARLY TREATMENTS AT SMALLPOX • In the 6th century BC, the Chinese practiced a form of treatment called variolation. • They took smallpox scabs • Ground up the scabs • And inhaled the power HOW DID IT WORK? • GUESS How did it work.. • Sometimes it gave the patients smallpox • Sometimes it did not work and patients got smallpox later • Sometimes it worked and people were protected against smallpox for life • Explanation….. Europe • Europeans had a different way to practice variolation • They scraped patient’s arms and placed smallpox pus into the patient’s arms How did It work? • Explanation….. cowpox Towards a smallpox vaccine • People began to notice that dairy maids who got cowpox, lived and worked around people with smallpox, but the dairy maids did not get smallpox Edward Jenner Edward Jenner • Needed a subject to test his hypothesis that cowpox protected against smallpox. • So he “volunteered” his gardner’s son – James Phipps Steps taken: • • • • Scratch arm Add cowpox pus Phipps had a mild case of cowpox Two weeks later Phipps was given a large dose of smallpox pus by Jenner • Phipps never got smallpox and was therefore protected Why did Jenner’s vaccine work? Vaccine • The term used to give a patient a mimic or fake disease in order to prevent them from getting the real disease is called a vaccine – in honor of Jenner ( vacca – cow) Smallpox reaction • • • • • Jenner, after his vaccine in 1796 found A. fame B. fortune C. fame and fortune D. neither fame nor fortune Eradication of smallpox • The annual cost of the smallpox campaign between 1967-1979 was US $23 million. • Was this a worthwhile use of taxpayer money? • discuss • The US saves the total of all its contributions every 26 days because it does not have to vaccinate or treat the disease. Modern Vaccines • Modern vaccines are made from killed bacteria or inactivated viruses • Or they are weaked • Or they are pieces of part of the whole germ • Or they are mimics of the poisons bacteria create Viral diseases • Prevented with vaccines • Cannot be treated with antibiotics polio polio polio • Work of Jonas Salk • Began working on a vaccine for polio in 1942. • Guess when the vaccine was ready for testing? polio • 1954 – approved for testing – how Salk “jumped the gun” • 1955 – approved for public use Polio today Bacterial diseases • Strep throat – caused by Streptococcus pyogenes Strep throat • The strep bacteria produce a poison that makes the capillaries swell open- causing blood to rush under the skin – called • SCARLET FEVER Strep throat • The patient makes antibodies against the strep poison. • The antibodies also bind with heart and kidney tissue and damage the heart and kidneys. Strep throat • The reason why doctors check for strep, is because it would be better to attach the infection with antibiotics not antibodies. • SOMETIMES MEDICINES ARE BETTER THAN LETTING NATURE TAKE ITS COURSE • That way the patient does not make an army of antibodies that could damage the heart and kidneys. BOTULISM CHOLERA SYPHILIS GONORRHEA PRIONS • Are infectious particles made of protein only • THEY HAVE NO GENES – SO HOW DO THEY SPREAD??? HOW PRIONS SPREAD • Prions are deformed proteins that cause the proteins in the brain to deform • It would be like if everyone you bumped into would turn into you, and those people would bump into other turning them into you –soon there would be a whole lot of you Prion diseases • BSE – Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy – also known as mad cow disease • Kuru