Friday, April 17, 2020
THE BUBONIC PLAGUE Essays (1314 words) - Medicine, Plague, Health
  THE BUBONIC PLAGUE    THE BUBONIC PLAGUE    Plague, was a term that was used in the    Middle Ages to describe all fatal epidemic diseases, but now it is only  applied to an infectious, contagious disease of rodents and humans. In  humans, plague occurs in three forms: bubonic plague, pneumonic plague,  and septicemic plague. The best known form is the bubonic plague and it  is named after buboes, or enlarged, inflamed lymph nodes, which are characteristics  of the plague in the groin or neck or armpit. Bubonic plague can only be  transmitted by the bite of any of numerous insects that are normally parasitic  on rodents and that seek new hosts when the original host dies. If the  plague is left untreated it is fatal in thirty to seventy five percent  of all cases. Mortality in treated cases is only five to ten percent.    The origin of the bubonic plague is unknown  but it may have started in Africa or India. Colonies of infected rats were  established in Northern India, many years ago. Some of these rodents had  infected traders on the route between the Middle East and China. After    1330 the plague had invaded China. From China it was transferred westward  by traders and Mongol armies in the 14th century. While these traders were  travelling westward they followed a more northerly route through the grasslands  of what is now Russia, establishing a vast infected rodent population there.    In 1346 the disease reached Crimea and  found its way to Europe in 1347. The outbreak in Europe was a devastating  one, which resulted in more than 25 million deaths-about twenty five percent  of the continent's whole population. After that the plague reappeared in  many European cities until the early 18th century, when it suddenly stopped  there. No explanation has ever been given for the plague's rapid disappearance.    The first symptoms of the bubonic plague  are headache, vomiting, nausea, aching joints and a feeling of ill health.    The lymph nodes of the groin or of the armpit or neck suddenly start to  become swollen and painful. The pulse and respiration rate of a bubonic  plague victim is increased, and the victim will become listless and exhausted.    The buboes will swell until they are approximately the size of a chicken  egg. If a case is nonfatal than the temperature will begin to fall in about  five days, and returnt to normal in about two weeks, but in fatal cases  death will probably occur within four days.    Yersinia Pestis, an infectious, round and  rod shaped agent is the cause of the Bubonic Plague. Yersina Pestis is  a bacteria, which means the cells lack the internal organization of eukaryotic  cells. These bacteria cells would contain the membrane but they would not  be able to subdivide the inside of the cell. These bacteria cells do not  have a nucleus so instead they have a nucleiod that contains genetic material.    The two types of bacteria cells are gram-negative and gram-positive. Yersina    Pestis is gram negative and that means that antibiotics are less effective  on the plague because of a lipopolysaccharide layer over their walls that  adds extra protection.    The bubonic plague has a major impact on  the lymphatic system. The lymphatic system is made up of lymph nodes, lymphatic  vessels, lymphoid organs and circulating lymphocytes. Plague victims tend  to have large bumps on their bodies which are called "buboes". These are  actually swollen lymph nodes filled with puss. The spread of the infection  causes the lymph nodes to become hard and painful.    The lymph nodes are heavily concentrated  in the neck, armpits, and groin. When a person becomes ill these areas  will begin to swell because the body needs to make a vast amount of white  blood cells to fight off whatever pathogen has entered the body.    Many preventive measures can be used to  reduce the spread of the plague (sanitation, killing of rats, prevention  in transport of rats). Individuals who contract the disease are isolated,  fed fluids and put to bed. During World War II, scientists using sulfa  drugs were able to produce cures of plague.    Since it is a bacteria, the bubonic plague  can be treated with antibiotics. Tetracyline, Streptomycin, and Chloramphenicol  are three of the antibiotics used to prevent plague. Sometimes, they are  even mixed together. The plague can almost always be cured when it is recognized  fast enough.    Since the late 19th century bubonic plague  vaccinations have been in use. There is a vaccine that can be taken in  a six to month installment period, but there is a element of risk to this  vaccination. This vaccination has been proven to be ineffective with people  younger    
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