A town of about 30, 000 people in China was sealed off and 151 residents were quarantined after a man died of bubonic plague, AFP reported Tuesday. Consider these other scary maladies that still afflict people worldwide.
In Madagascar, about 500 people every year contract the plague.
A town of about 30,000 people in China was sealed off and 151 residents were quarantined after a man died of bubonic plague, AFP reported Tuesday. The man found a dead marmot, which he cut up to feed to his dog. Later that day he developed a fever.
The plague, a deadly bacterial infection, sometimes appears in unexpected places, including the United States, though it’s more common in Africa and Asia, reports the CDC.
But the plague isn’t the only resurgent disease humans once thought they had beat. Consider these other scary maladies that still afflict people worldwide.
A ribbons molecular model of Botulinum Toxin, commonly known as Botox. This protein produced by the botulism bacteria is highly neurotoxic. Yet it’s commonly used in cosmetic surgery.
The first new form of the botulinum toxin in more than 40 years was recently discovered by scientists. The toxin causes botulism, and is one of the most deadly poisons known. But they’re keeping mum about it because there’s no available treatment. Scientists fear the toxin could be used to create a powerful new biological weapon.
No one applauds the clap, but the disease seems to be coming back for an encore. The Centers for Disease Control warns that there is now only one drug, ceftriaxone, which is effective as a first treatment for the sexually transmitted gonorrhea.
Inhaling coal dust can lead to the deadly disease pneumoconiosis, known as black lung disease. It was once hoped that safety devices and filters would save miner’s lungs, but an investigation by National Public Radio and the Center for Public Integrity found that not only are the number of cases on the rise, but younger miners are being struck down by a faster progression of the disease. Inhaling coal can kill you, but burning it threatens your life in a more indirect way.
As greenhouse gases warm the planet, research warns that the mosquitos may be able to spread malaria further and more easily. In the past, malaria affected North America as far north as Canada. Eradication programs largely wiped the disease out in the United States, but a warmer, wetter climate means more mosquitos, making it harder to control them. Malaria kills more than 1 million people a year, reports the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington.
No matter what Gabriel Garcia Marquez says, there’s no love in the time of cholera, a deadly diarrhea spread by contaminated water. In the wake of the earthquake that devastated Port-au-Prince, a cholera outbreak raged across Haiti. About 8,400 Haitians have died of cholera since 2010, reports NPR, and 1,000 are still dying each year.
Tuberculosis killed some of history’s greats including Franz Kafka, George Orwell, Eleanor Roosevelt and Henry David Thoreau. The disease seemed to be on its way out after vaccines and a sequence of antibiotics were found to combat the disease. Unfortunately, drug-resistant strains developed in the 1980s and then spread. Tuberculosis is now globally the second largest killer after HIV/AIDS, when considering single infectious agents, according to the World Health Organization. In 2010, 1.4 million people died from tuberculosis.
Tuberculosis should serve as a warning in the fight against polio. When a disease is down, don’t let it get back up. Four organizations — Rotary International, the World Health Organization, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and UNICEF — are leading the charge to wipe polio off the planet.
Gonorrhea isn’t the only venereal disease in town. Syphilis has been making a comeback, particularly in Germany and Australia. The historical bane of those who frequented the red-light district, syphilis stung famous libertines like Charles Baudelaire, Scott Joplin and Édouard Manet.
Meningococcal meningitis is rare, but can kill a child in a single day. Vaccination rates for the disease are low, but the Voices of Meningitis movement is pushing to increase vaccination rates for children in the United States. The disease spreads through simple contact and can be difficult to diagnose until is it too late.
About 48,277 cases of pertussis, or whooping cough, were reported to the CDC in 2012. It’s the most since 1955, when 62,786 cases were reported. Whooping cough can be life threatening, especially to infants, and causes a cough that lasts 10 weeks or more.
The intestine-dissolving disease featured in the movies “Outbreak” (above) and “The Hot Zone” struck Uganda in 2012. The World Health Organization says seven people were infected and four died.
The outbreak in Uganda was difficult to control, in part, because some believed it was caused by witchcraft rather than Ebola. The WHO mobilized social mobilization teams and engaged traditional healers and religious leaders to get the word out about the dreaded disease.
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