Lab 13 Infectious Disease
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ANTH 161
Name ___________________________
Lab 13
Lab section _______________________
Infectious Diseases
About the Lab
This lab will cover key elements of the science and history of infectious diseases in the age of
Homo sapiens
. The content has been modified from Dr. Sharon DeWitte’s course, ANTH204
Plagues: Past and Present.
Exercise 1:
The Fundamentals of Infectious Disease
Watch the following video and fill in the definitions for the vocabulary listed below and answer
the questions.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9axOFtPqS0c
As mentioned in the video, there are multiple ways for people to be infected with a disease.
Some modes of transmission that were not discussed include
airborne, fecal-oral, sexual,
blood, mother-to-child,
and
direct contact
. Different diseases spread via different modes of
transmission, oftentimes spread by multiple modes. For example, treponemal diseases (such as
syphilis) can be passed from mother to child and cause
hereditary syphilis
, while also being
contagious via direct contact and bodily fluids.
Vocabulary
1.
Incubation period
– the time it takes for you to notice symptoms after you've been
infected with something.
2.
Infectious period
– the time span between the first signs of an infectious disease and the
final host reaction
3.
Carriers
– can pass on to its progeny a genetic variant (allele) associated with an
autosomal recessive or sex-linked disease (or trait), and who does not show signs of such
disease (or features of that trait).
4.
Case Fatality
– The proportion of people diagnosed with an illness who die from it is
known as the case fatality ratio, and it is used to assess the severity of cases found.
5.
Basic Reproductive Rate
–
In a population of susceptible, the estimated number of
secondary infections occurring from a single individual during his or her infectious
period.
6.
Secondary Attack Rate
– the percentage of nonindex household members that received
a positive test result within 7 days of the index case's sample date, divided by the total
number of nonindex household members.
7.
Zoonotic diseases
– is an infectious disease that can be passed from one species to
another, such as from animals to humans.
8.
Emerging Infectious Disease
– Infectious diseases that have recently developed in a
community or that had previously existed but are rapidly growing in incidence or
geographic range are known as emerging infectious diseases.
1
ANTH 161
Name ___________________________
Lab 13
Lab section _______________________
9.
Vector-Borne Diseases
–
Disease caused by an infection spread by blood-feeding
anthropoids such as mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas to humans and other animals.
Questions
:
1.
What are four types of infectious agents?
agents cause a wide variety of diseases affecting various parts of the
body. The five main types of infectious agents are
bacteria, protozoa,
viruses,
parasitic worms, and fungi
.
2.
What percentage of human diseases are zoonotic? Give one example of a zoonotic
disease
Most of the infectious diseases affecting humans are of animal origin. The
“Asia Pacific strategy for emerging diseases: 2010” report estimated that
around
60%
of the emerging human infections are zoonotic in nature and
among these pathogens more than 70% originated from wildlife species
3.
Give an example of an Emerging Infectious Disease
HIV infections, SARS, Lyme disease, E. coli O157:H7 (E. coli), hantavirus, dengue fever, West
Nile virus, and the Zika virus are all examples of emerging illnesses. Diseases that resurface after
a long period of decrease are known as reemerging diseases.
Exercise 2: Diseases over time
Humans have always dealt with pathogens. Both people and various pathogens constantly evolve
in response to each other. However, the types of disease that humans encounter have changed
over the course of our history, especially after the rise of agriculture and urbanization.
Hunter-gatherers were not affected by many of the diseases we think of as common in the US, as
their nomadic way of life and small population groups prevented widespread transmission of
diseases in the way our densely populated cities do. Instead, they were impacted most often by
zoonotic and vector-based diseases and those that persist in the environment (e.g. in soil and
water). Common diseases include tetanus, typhus, sleeping sickness (trypanosomiasis), lice,
pinworms, and typhoid fever.
With the transition to agriculture in the Neolithic, population demographics began to change. As
food was now consistently available and grown in a small area, people settled down and
populations grew. Animal domestication and increased population density increased
susceptibility to diseases as people consumed contaminated water and were in close contact with
both animals (zoonotic disease) and lots of other people.
One example of this is the site of Dickson Mounds, located along the Illinois River in central
Illinois. This site was occupied for centuries and the
strata
show changes in diet from the
hunting and gathering to intensive maize agriculture around 1200-1300 CE. During the transition
to agriculture, evidence of infectious disease doubled to almost 70% of the population after the
shift to agriculture as the primary means of subsistence. This increase in disease prevalence is
2
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