3,500 years of anthrax. (Chart-Reading Skills).Anthrax anthrax (ăn`thrăks), acute infectious disease of animals that can be secondarily transmitted to humans. It is caused by a bacterium (Bacillus anthracis is currently headline news, but there's nothing new about the deadly disease. Anthrax has plagued the world--killing humans and animals--for thousands of years. For much of that time, anthrax was called "woolsorter's disease woolsorter's disease pulmonary anthrax. woolsorter's disease Inhalation anthrax, see there " because anthrax spores clung clung v. Past tense and past participle of cling. clung Verb the past of cling clung cling to sheep wool and infected in·fect tr.v. in·fect·ed, in·fect·ing, in·fects 1. To contaminate with a pathogenic microorganism or agent. 2. To communicate a pathogen or disease to. 3. To invade and produce infection in. people who worked with wool. Study the time line below to trace anthrax through the ages.
1500 B.C.. According to the Old Testament, the "plague of boils"
--possibly anthrax--devastates Egyptian livestock.
1600s A.D. The "Black Bane," now thought to have been anthrax, kills
60,000 cattle in Europe.
1876 Using his microscope, Dr. Robert Koch identifies the
microorganism that causes anthrax: Bacillus anthracis.
1881 Louis Pasteur develops an anthrax vaccine for livestock.
1915 German agents allegedly inject American horses and cattle
with anthrax during World War I.
1942 After experimenting with anthrax on Gruinard Island, off
Scotland, the British government bans humans from setting
foot on the island's soil for 50 years.
1943 U.S. begins developing anthrax weapons.
1971 Human anthrax vaccine introduced. It helps prevent the
disease from infecting people who work with livestock.
1972 The Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, an
international treaty, takes ambitious steps to ban both
biological and chemical weapons.
1979 Aerosolized anthrax spores accidentally released from an
ultra-secret research facility in the Soviet Union kill
60 to 100 people downwind from the plant.
1990-1993 Japanese Cult Aum Shinrikyo releases anthrax spores in
Tokyo. Luckily, the tactic fails and no one falls ill.
2001 After anthrax-laced letters cause several infections,
officials warn panic-stricken Americans not to take Cipro
or other antibiotics "just in case."
2001 Harvard University researchers announce that they've
found a way to block the effects of deadly toxins
produced by the anthrax bacteria.
Use the time line and the article "Anthrax: Facts, not Fears" (p. 4) to answer the questions below. Write your answers in complete sentences. 1. What is the scientific name of the anthrax bacteria? Who first identified it? When? 2. How do you think people died after anthrax spores accidentally escaped from a secret research facility? 3. After the cult cult, ritual observances involved in worship of, or communication with, the supernatural or its symbolic representations. A cult includes the totality of ideas, activities, and practices associated with a given divinity or social group. Aum Shinrikyo AUM Shinrikyo (Japanese; “AUM Supreme Truth”) Japanese new religious movement founded by Asahara Shoko (b. 1955 as Matsumoto Chizuo) in 1987. It contained elements of Hinduism and Buddhism and was founded on the millenarian expectation of a series of released anthrax spores, what symptoms would doctors have looked for to tell if people had been infected? 4. Based on what you know about anthrax spores, explain why authorities banned humans from Gruinard Island Gruinard Island is a small Scottish island, located in Gruinard Bay, about halfway between Gairloch and Ullapool. In 1942, it was the site of a highly successful biological warfare test by British military scientists from Porton Down. for 50 years? 5. What can happen to bacteria when people who aren't aren't Contraction of are not. See Usage Note at ain't. aren't are not aren't be sick take antibiotics Antibiotics Definition Antibiotics may be informally defined as the subgroup of anti-infectives that are derived from bacterial sources and are used to treat bacterial infections. just in case? |
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