Botulism is a rare but very serious disease. It is a extremely dangerous disease that kills more than half of the people that get it without treatment. It interests me because it is so easy to get yet so deadly and so rare. Botulism comes in many different forms so it is difficult to avoid sometimes. Here are some facts about botulism and its different forms. Botulism causes fatigue and dizziness to the whole body and causes a lot of negative effects to your gastrointestinal system. It thrives in areas such as cans that have an anaerobic atmosphere (atmosphere with little to no air). Botulism starts out as a germ called clostridium botulinum which is commonly found in soil (clostridium botulinum is a rod shaped, anaerobic, spore-forming, motile
The common symptoms associated with Botulism include double vision, blurred vision, drooping eyelids, blurred vision, slurred speech, and difficulty swallowing, dry mouth and muscle weakness, vomiting, and diarrhea. After being examined by a doctor his examination may show the gag reflex and the deep tendon reflexes like the knee jerk are either decreased or even absent. Infants who have botulism may appear to be lethargic, weak, and have floppy movements due to muscle weakness and trouble controlling the head. Infants may eat poorly, become constipated, have a weak cry, poor muscle tone and difficulty sucking or feeding. Many of these symptoms are part of the muscle paralysis that is caused by the bacterial neurotoxin. If these symptoms are untreated they may cause paralysis in the various parts of the body. The most often paralysis seen is as the descending paralysis of the arms, legs, trunk and the breathing muscles.
Botox consists of injections of botulin toxin, a poison that paralyzes the muscles. Some side effects include eye drooping, headaches, reduced blinking, and nausea that could last up to a couple of months. The injection can also cause side effects including facial pain, swelling, redness, and bruising (Flynn). By paralyzing different facial muscles, Botox may temporarily leave a smoother, wrinkle-free appearance, leaving the patient more confident in their own skin. Botox has short-term side effects that include bruising, allergic reactions, or paralysis of the wrong muscle group. A research study found that Botox might dampen or interfere with the ability to experience emotion in certain situations as well. When the muscle becomes paralyzed, the patient is incapable of moving/flexing those certain muscles in their face causes them to show less emotion physically (Ranoux). This can lead to long-term effects like depression if one keeps up the injections in those facial areas to take away the wrinkles. While this is an extreme case of Botox, there are many incidents that include this kind of reaction and some even concluding with
Foodborne botulism is transmitted by ingestion of toxin produced in food by C. botulinum. No person to person transmission.
Made of a canvas outer garment coated in wax, as well as waxed leather pants, gloves, boots and hat. A dark leather hood and mask with a very grotesque curved beak (Jackie Rosenhek, 2011). A serial killer, Halloween costume perhaps or a cosplay outfit for a horror movie? No, a doctor actually is what this outfit was meant for. Doctors wore this attire in the medieval times in order to protect themselves from the bubonic plague. We 've all heard of the bubonic plague in our history classes. We know the numbers and effects and how deadly it was. However the bubonic plague is still on the hunt and loose. Yes, numbers in outbreaks of the bubonic plague have doubled since 2014. There have been very few, but a pathogen such as the Black Death is not to be taken lightly.
During 1348- 1349, a devastating sickness swept over all of Western Europe that wiped out about half of the population. The Black Death, also known as The Plague and the Bubonic Plague, killed thousands over the span of two summers. The Black Death was caused by the bacteria Y. Pestis, which normally lives dormant in a flea's stomach. However, when a flea bites a rat, the rat becomes infected, which eventually leads to a human being infected. Since rats had a high abundance in 1348-1349, the disease was very easily spread to humans, where it then became airborne (pneumonic), bubonic, or spread throughout the blood, also known as systemic. (The Black Death).
The Bubonic Plague, often acknowledged as the worst epidemic in the history of Europe, also known as the Black Death, the Black Plague, and the Pestilence, the worst time was 1348-1350. By the end of 1350, according to Zarlengo, almost three fourths of the population had been decimated. Today the Pestilence has an antibiotic cure and since rats and fleas are kept at a low and are not shipped from one place to another, we have less of a chance of getting it again. However, at that point there was no cure and people died by the hundreds.
The Black Death infected the entire continent of Europe in the years from 1347 to 1353. This bubonic plague killed over 200 million citizens, half the world’s population at the time! First, the disease infected fleas, which housed on the rats. This made the rats a transportation method for the Black Death. For example, “Each time a flea or rat bit a human, this person automatically contracted the Black Death” as stated on the History Channel. Secondly, the Black Death spread throughout the continent because of people’s travels. For instance, “It was first discovered in Europe when sailboats docked in Messina and were full of people who had contracted this Black Death,” as also stated on the History Channel. Lastly, the Black Death was a very
When Bubonic Plague visited England in 1348, it was called the Great Mortality. We know it as the Black Death that lasted until 1352 and killed vast populations in Asia , North Africa , Europe , Iceland , and Greenland . In total, it extinguished as much as fifty percent of the world's population.
Smallpox is a highly contagious virus that has no known cure. Variola, is the name of the virus that caused one of the largest epidemics known to man. Smallpox killed nearly 500 million people in the 20th Century alone. Before Smallpox was eradicated it killed nearly 60% of all infected people. Smallpox has been coexisting with humans for thousands of years and has a very long history.
During the 1330s there was an outbreak of the bubonic plague, Its first out of three appearances. The bubonic plague is also known as The Black Death plague because of the symptom, gangrene, which cause blackness of the extremities. The bubonic plague is an infectious-bacterial disease which classifies as proteobacterial, the pathogen Yersinia pestis is responsible for causing the bubonic plague as well as pneumonic and specticemic, Yersinia pathogen is a gram negative, rod shaped and non-spore forming bacteria.
The symptoms of the bubonic plague spread rapidly causing outbreaks and identifying the need for modern science to deal with epidemics.
The black death (Also called Bubonic Plague) was one of the deadliest disease’s to ever inflict upon the human race, and had many effect to society. The disease was first noticed in China in 224 B.C.E but the most notable outbreak was in the spring of 1347, the first symptoms of the black death appeared within a few days of infection. The symptoms included fever, headache, feeling of weakness, aches in the leg and groin, white tongue, rapid pulse, slurred speech, confusion, and fatigue. After the third day of infection painful growths called buboes began to appear near the groin, armpits and neck. Then the infected’s nervous system broke down which caused extreme pain and neurological disorders. After the fourth day, high levels of anxiety
The Bubonic Plague erupted in 1320 in the Gobi Desert in central Asia. This plague was passed through rodents to other animals and then to humans through flea bites. This plague has three different names, The Bubonic Plague, The Black Death, and Yersinia pestis. Y. Pestis was named after one of its co-founders, Alexandre Yersin. It’s called the Black death because your blood dries underneath of the skin and turns it black, you can also get skin sores that turn black.
The Bubonic Plague is what we are talking about today. It is referred to as the Black Death for a couple of reasons. One of the reasons had to do with the symptoms that is brought along with it. They call it the Black Death because everything is black because everyone is either dying or staying to themselves. The sites that we read presented us with the information that I will share with everyone below.
This is an infectious disease. Infectious diseases are disorder that are caused by organisms such as, viruses, bacteria, parasites, or fungi. Some infectious diseases can be passed from human to human