SteveStrummerUK
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Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
Interesting stuff, from WORLD SCIENCE: “Black Death” could return, study warns The recurring plagues known as the “Black Death,” which decimated medieval peoples, could return in modern times as antibiotic-resistant forms of the virus have emerged, a study warns. These tougher strains are raising “serious concerns,” according to the study, published in the March issue of the journal Infection, Genetics and Evolution. The findings were announced on March 15 as archaeologists unearthed a “Black Death” grave in London, containing more than a dozen skeletons of people suspected to have died from the plague. The victims are thought to have died during the 14th century and archaeologists anticipate finding many more as they excavate the site. The plague is a highly contagious disease affecting the lungs. Population levels suffered globally due to the plague, with around 75 million people globally perishing during the 14th century Black Death, according to researchers. The plague has returned episodically in recent decades, although, thanks to modern medical care, fatalities have not surpassed a few dozen in any recent outbreak. The new study analyses the Great Plague of Marseille, which caused 100,000 deaths between 1720 and 1723. “It is quite instructive to revisit the sequence of events and decisions that led to the outbreak,” wrote the author, Christian Devaux of the Center for Pathogenic Agents and Health Biotechnologies in Montpellier, France. “Although the threat was known and health surveillance existed with quite effective preventive measures such as quarantine, the accumulation of small negligence led to one of the worst epidemics in the city (about 30 percent of casualties among the inhabitants),” he wrote. “This is an excellent model to illustrate the issues we are facing with emerging and reemerging infectious diseases today and to define how to improve biosurveillance and response tomorrow.” “The risk of plague dissemination by transport trade is negligible between developed countries,” he added, but “this risk still persists in developing countries. In addition, the emergence of antibiotic resistant strains of Yersinia pestis, the infectious agent of plague, is raising serious concerns for public health.” Genetic change has also made the bacteria better able to live in mammalian blood, he wrote. In the April issue of the journal Clinical and Experimental Immunology, researchers with the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, Salisbury, U.K. note that work is underway toward a vaccine for plague.
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Bristol_Jonesey
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/27 13:23:51
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Thanks for that Steve. Looks like we'll all be confined to our studios when it starts.
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slartabartfast
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/27 15:09:52
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antibiotic-resistant forms of the virus Hmm. The plague was caused by Pasturella pestis, a bacterium that is endemic in rodents in this country. Technically, there are no antibiotics that work on viruses, those drugs are called antivirals, but since P pestis is not a virus, the correct term is antibiotic. There are probably significant differences in virulence between the strains of P pestis that were prevalent during the great plague epidemics of the Middle Ages, or we would likely have seen continued serious outbreaks before the 1950's when antibiotics started to become widely available. It was not antibiotics that stopped the plague, or arguably even control of rodent vectors by improvement in hygiene and extermination practices. That is not to say that genetic changes in the bacteria could not again produce a highly communicable variety. Sporadic cases are often treated successfully with antibiotics, and loss of that option to control person to person spread would be problematic--and fatal for many of the infected. But that was never the major route of transmission in spite of the existence of the devastating pneumonic form of the disease. Modern hygiene including control of fleas and rodents has given us more protection from infectious bacteria than antibiotics. Incidentally the Russians reportedly developed a weaponized strain of plague that was resistant to all antibiotics known at the time. This work was apparently done before the powerful genetic engineering available today. It is not at all inconceivable that a terrorist with a masters degree in biology and a little luck could do what nature has not.
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soens
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/27 16:01:32
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post edited by soens - 2013/04/17 23:06:40
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craigb
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/27 16:21:42
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Did they say anything about the Fuschia and Periwinkle Death returning too?
Time for all of you to head over to Beyond My DAW!
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michaelhanson
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/27 17:22:53
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I thought in part, this thread was going to be about the emergence of a new heavy metal band.
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Linear Phase
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/27 17:32:22
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If we all get sick; I sure hope to become a vampire like Louis de Pointe du Lac.
too many lasers... Sonar = audio editing ninja of a music software!
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jamesg1213
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/27 17:42:57
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Jyemz Thrombold's Patented Brisk Weather Pantaloonettes with Inclementometer
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trimph1
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/28 04:40:44
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Ebola....now there is a worry....
The space you have will always be exceeded in direct proportion to the amount of stuff you have...Thornton's Postulate. Bushpianos
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SongCraft
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/28 07:26:34
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Oh well, to be on the safe-side, we'll all have to live in our own hygienic little bubble and communicate in a virtual world, have additional outies and fed intravenously. Welcome to the Matrix!
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Kalle Rantaaho
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/28 08:10:31
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trimph1 Ebola....now there is a worry.... Or then not...It kills so fast it can not travel far. Or at least it seems that way at the moment :o/ About the plague, yes, as mentioned, it vanished without antibiotics hundreds of years ago, so I wonder how the possible resistancy could make it burst. There are many "plagues" roaming around, though, due to resistant bacteria. Tuberculosis, various "meat eating" streptococchus which can lead to a painfull death, and a whole bunch of bacteria that are killing people in hospitals. One thing is for sure: Bacteria will inherit the land.
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craigb
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/28 08:27:52
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Should social disease media sites be considered plagues?
Time for all of you to head over to Beyond My DAW!
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Mesh
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/28 09:08:25
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craigb Should social disease media sites be considered plagues? AKA - Mental Suicide.
Platinum Gaming DAW: AsRock Z77 Overclock FormulaI7 3770k @ 4.5GHz : 16GB RAM G.Skill Ripjaws X 250GB OS SSD : 3TB HDD : 1TB Sample HDDWin 10 Pro x 64 : NH-D14 CPU Cooler HIS IceQ 2GB HD 7870Focusrite Scarlett 2i4The_Forum_Monkeys
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SteveStrummerUK
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Re:Increasing resistance to antibiotics and the return of The Black Death.
2013/03/28 14:13:43
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Kalle Rantaaho One thing is for sure: Bacteria will inherit the land. They had it first after all.
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