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Copy down your homework Get ready to start new notes Get ready to answer your Do Now You have learned about the bubonic plague in social studies class, how is it transmitted? Bacterial Infections and Viral Infections Nonliving, do not have cells Unicellular, living organisms Can be helpful to humans Can be killed with antibiotic medication Reproduce on their own asexually Examples: tetanus, cholera, staphylococcus, STDs (syphilis, gonorrhea), tuberculosis, pneumonia, bubonic plague Infectious agents that can make people sick Can Cause: fever, fatigue, and general malaise Need a “host” organism Always harmful Antiviral medication will slow reproduction, but cannot destroy virus Smaller than bacteria Examples: common cold, chicken pox, influenza, Ebola, HIV/AIDS Video There are three forms of the Plague ◦ Bubonic (most common) ◦ Septicemic ◦ Pneumonic 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 19th century began in Asia estimated 10 million deaths Symptoms Treatment ◦ Incubation period – 3 to 7 days ◦ Flu-like symptoms: sudden onset fever, chills, head and bodyaches and weakness, vomiting, and nausea ◦ Bubo – the lymph nodes become inflamed, tense and painful, they can even become open sores ◦ 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 Fatality Rate 50% average Outbreaks Transmission ◦ Fatality rates vary from outbreak to outbreak 25% to 90% ◦ Initial - villages in Central Africa as well as Sudan in 1976 ◦ Most recent - West Africa in major urban and rural areas 2014 ◦ 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 Symptoms Treatment ◦ 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 ◦ Supportive care (rehydration with oral or intravenous fluids) ◦ Treatment of symptoms ◦ Currently no licensed vaccines however 2 potential vaccines are undergoing human safety testing 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) 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 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 Wash hands often Cover your mouth when sneezing or coughing Take proper care of cuts/wounds 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 What type of infection (bacterial or viral) is caused by a living thing? World Health Organization ◦ http://www.who.int/en/ Center for Disease Control ◦ http://www.cdc.gov AIDS.gov ◦ http://www.aids.gov