Infectious Diseases in History Flashcards

1
Q

give 3 large examples of how infectious disease has shaped history

A
  1. more lives were lost in the Civil War from dysentery than fighting
  2. more dies from the Spanish flu in 1918 than all WWI casualties
  3. greek and roman civilizations declined in part due to waves of infectious disease
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2
Q

what type of infection is pneumonia?

A

bacterial AND viral

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3
Q

what organism causes pneumonia?

A

streptococcus pneumonia

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4
Q

how does pneumonia often strike?

A

the immune suppressed as a secondary infection

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5
Q

what is the cuasative agent of antonine plague?

A

unknown

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6
Q

what is the historical significance of the antonine plague?

A

made people question the government and religious institutions in the Roman empire

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7
Q

what kind if infectious agent is malaria?

A

protozoan

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8
Q

give 2 examples of global implications of malaria

A

WWII and vietnam but this is still ongoing today

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9
Q

describe the historical importance of HIV

A

rewrote history by affecting homoesexuals and hemophiliacs, a virus

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10
Q

what kind of agent causes syphilis?

A

a spirochete bacteria

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11
Q

what is the interesting thing about syphilis?

A

it seems to have spread from North America to Europe (usually the other way around)

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12
Q

give a sad historical connection to syphilis

A

the Tuskeegee experiments

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13
Q

describe the historical significance of measles

A

hella infectious, wiped out a lot of North and Latin America

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14
Q

what organism causes leprosy?

A

mycobacterium leperae

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15
Q

what is the only known reservoir of leprosy?

A

armadillos

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16
Q

what is the historical significance of leprosy?

A

in the Bible

17
Q

what is the historical significance of bubonic plague?

A

changed the relationship between nobility and peasants and broke down the feudal system as well as a religious shift due to scared clergymen running away from disease leading to the reformation

18
Q

what is the causative agent of bubonic plague?

A

Yersinia pestis

19
Q

what is the original reservoir of yersinia pestis?

A

marmots, then to fleas and rats

20
Q

what is the historical significance of tetanus?

A

found in many wars due to shrapnel

21
Q

describe the historical significance of bordatella pertussis

A

the iditarod was originally a rescue and supply mission to isolated people sick in Alaska

22
Q

what is the historical significance of diarrhea?

A

kills mroe children than all other diseases combined

23
Q

what is the king cause of diarrhea?

A

cholera, or other digestive tract viruses and bacteria like salmonella

24
Q

where did the Spanish Flu of 1918 start?

A

in military bases in Kansas due to all the pigs slaughtered to feed the soldiers

25
Q

what is the historical significance of Spanish Flu (other than all the death)?

A

one of the reasons for the establishment of the Public Health Services, which runs the CDC

26
Q

what is the cause of tuberculosis?

A

mycobacterium encyst in tissue

27
Q

what is tubuerculosis?

A

a chronic disease that erodes lung tissue

28
Q

what is the treatment for tuberculosis?

A

6 month antibiotic treatment

29
Q

what is the issue with treating tuberculosis?

A

we’ve been treating it for so long that we now have drug resistance

30
Q

where is tuberculosis bad?

A

where people are stressed and crowded and damp

31
Q

where does yellow fever show up

A

near water

32
Q

how is yellow fever spread?

A

mosquitos

33
Q

what is the historical significance of yellow fever?

A

the French were too sick with yellow fever to finish building the panama canal and the US owned it for a minute