New
Infectious Diseases
In
1978 the United Nations adopted a resolution that set goals
for eradicating infectious disease by the year 2000. This
lofty goal proved impossible to achieve. The years since the
resolution was adopted have seen the emergence of new killers
and a rise in the incidence of such ancient scourges as malaria,
yellow fever, and tuberculosis.
Among the diseases new to science are AIDS, Ebola hemorrhagic
fever, Legionnaires disease, and Lyme disease. AIDS
has been the most deadly of all the new diseases, but even
it has not taken as high a toll as malaria, tuberculosis,
and other diseases that have been around for centuries. Some
newly identified disease-causing agents for diseases that
have been recognized for a long time include Human T-lymphotropic
virus I (HTLV-1), which can cause some cases of non-Hodgkins
lymphoma, a type of cancer originating in the lymphatic system;
and HTLV-2, which is associated with hairy-cell leukemia,
a rare type of cancer of the blood.
In most cases, the reasons for the emergence of a new disease
are unknown. One exception is Legionnaires disease.
It is caused by a bacterium that was not identified until
after an outbreak in 1976 at an American Legion convention
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Once identified, however, scientists
were able to retrospectively identify earlier epidemics of
the disease, and realized that each year the bacterium is
responsible for thousands of cases of pneumonia.
Environmental changes may be responsible for some new diseases.
Scientists speculate that the viruses for some of the deadly
hemorrhagic fevers that have surfaced in Africa, such as Ebola
and Marburg disease, have long existed in certain wild animals.
As people have encroached on wilderness areas they have come
into contact with the infected animals, and the viruses have
jumped from their traditional animal host to a new human host,
with deadly consequences.
In addition to new diseases, well-known pathogens may change,
or mutate, creating new, virulent strains. Influenza viruses
are among those that mutate frequently, which explains why
flu shots-vaccines that use modified or killed versions of
the influenza agent to stimulate a protective immune response
in the body-are given annually, and why epidemics of influenza
periodically occur. The strains of flu virus that were most
prevalent one year differ from those that bedevil humans the
next year. Vaccines that protected against last year's flu
virus may need to be altered to be effective against today's
most common strains.
A similar problem occurs when mutations in infectious agents
result in resistance to medicines that had been effective
treatments. The bacteria that cause bronchitis, meningitis,
tuberculosis, and pneumonia are among many that have developed
strains that are resistant to at least some antibiotics. As
a result, doctors have fewer options for treating the diseases
and preventing their spread.
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