Study reveals sari cloth filtration reduces cholera. (Environmental Intelligence).Filtering water with a folded piece of old cloth before drinking it cuts the rate of cholera contraction by half, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a three-year study in 65 Bangladeshi villages published in January 2003 in the U.S. journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. . The finding has the potential to save thousands of lives annually. Fabric from saris, the flowing, colorful garments South Asian women often wear, was cheap and readily available to the 133,000 people who participated in the study, and comparable fabrics could function as filters for populations at risk for cholera around the world. Ingesting a high dose of the waterborne bacteria Vibrio cholerae Vibrio chol·er·ae n. A bacterium that causes Asiatic cholera in humans; Koch's bacillus. Vibrio cholerae Infectious disease The Vibrio O1 produces cholera, an infection that causes severe dehydration brought on by acute diarrhea and vomiting. Left untreated, cholera can kill a person in 24 hours. Nearly 124,000 cases of the disease were reported in 2002, including 3,763 deaths, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). A large majority of these appeared on the African continent and in India. These statistics are highly unreliable, however, because many countries, including Bangladesh, do not report cholera data to the WHO. The sari cloth traps not V. cholerae themselves but copepods, a type of zooplankton zooplankton: see marine biology. zooplankton Small floating or weakly swimming animals that drift with water currents and, with phytoplankton, make up the planktonic food supply on which almost all oceanic organisms ultimately depend (see onto whose mouths, surfaces, and egg cases the vibrio vibrio Any of a group of aquatic, comma-shaped bacteria in the family Vibrionaceae. Some species cause serious diseases in humans and other animals. They are gram-negative (see attach. Although much of the vibrio did remain free in the filtered water, their number often diminished enough to fall short of an infective dose, estimated at [10.sup.4] and [10.sup.6] V. cholerae. The dilution lowered the rate of cholera infection by 48 percent. For those who did contract cholera via filtered water, the severity of the disease appears to have lessened, the report says. Electron microscopy electron microscopy Technique that allows examination of samples too small to be seen with a light microscope. Electron beams have much smaller wavelengths than visible light and hence higher resolving power. had revealed that sari cloth, when folded four to eight times, would create a filter of approximately 20 mm pore size, removing all copepods--and the cholera-causing bacteria attached to them--from the water. The old saris used in the experiment were expected to be more effective than new ones, their laundered fabric resulting in a smaller pore size. Rivers and ponds are a common source of drinking water drinking water supply of water available to animals for drinking supplied via nipples, in troughs, dams, ponds and larger natural water sources; an insufficient supply leads to dehydration; it can be the source of infection, e.g. leptospirosis, salmonellosis, or of poisoning, e.g. for the villages in rural Matlab, Bangladesh. Boiling water, which kills all waterborne microorganisms, is often impossible for the villagers, who are hard-pressed to find dry wood for fuel or the money to buy it. High concentrations of arsenic in the groundwater make well sources a poor alternative. (See "Poisoned Waters," January/February 2003.) The experiment, conducted by researchers from the University of Maryland University of Maryland can refer to:
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