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Viruses and Diseases in the Civil War

Viruses and Diseases in the Civil War. Miss Sabia. The Civil War was fought “at the end of the medical middle ages.” Union army surgeon general. Causes of Rapid Spread of Diseases. Poor sanitary conditions in camps Latrines built upwind

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Viruses and Diseases in the Civil War

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  1. Viruses and Diseases in the Civil War Miss Sabia

  2. The Civil War was fought “at the end of the medical middle ages.” • Union army surgeon general

  3. Causes of Rapid Spread of Diseases • Poor sanitary conditions in camps • Latrines built upwind • Waste from cooking and slaughtering animals built up on the ground

  4. The Camps • “littered with refuse, food, and other rubbish, sometimes in an offensive state of decomposition; slops deposited in pits within the camp limits or thrown out of broadcast; heaps of manure and offal close to the camp.” • Says one inspector in late 1861

  5. Causes of Rapid Spread of Diseases • Recruitment process allowed men in noticeably poor health to join the army • By late 1862, about 200,000 recruits accepted into the army were judged physically unfit and discharged

  6. The recruitment office

  7. “The next step was a medical examination to determine physical fitness for service. Each town had its physician for this work. The candidate for admission into the army must first divest himself of all clothing, and his soundness or unsoundness was then decided by causing him to jump, bend over, kick, receive sundry thumps in the chest and back, and such other laying-on of hands as was thought necessary. The teeth had also to be examined, and the eyesight tested, after which, if the candidate passed, he received a certificate to that effect.” • In 1860 and ‘61, more interested in proving fitness • In later years, only looking to prove unfitness

  8. Causes of Rapid Spread of Diseases • #1 CAUSE= CONTAMINATED WATER!

  9. May the Odds be Ever in Your Favor • For a soldier from the North: • 1 in 8 chance of dying from disease • 1 in 18 chance of dying in battle • For a soldier from the South: • 1 in 5 chance of dying from disease • 1 in 8 chance of dying in battle

  10. Some Statistics • Northern deaths: • 110,000 from battle • 225,000 from disease • Southern deaths: • 94,000 from battle • 164,000 from disease

  11. Disease was the biggest killer of the war

  12. Other Causes of Disease • Soldiers got infections from surgery • Surgeons did not know how to sterilize their equipment • Often did not wash their hands or equipment due to frequent shortage of water • These infections called “surgical fevers” • caused largely by bacterial cells that producedpus, destroyed tissue, and released deadly toxins into the blood

  13. “Typhoid fever was even more devastating. Perhaps one-quarter of noncombat deaths in the Confederacy resulted from this disease, caused by the consumption of food or water contaminated by salmonella bacteria.” • A simple cold could often developed into pneumonia

  14. The Main Killers • Typhoid • Pneumonia • Measles • Tuberculosis • malaria

  15. Pathogens • Microbes that cause diseases… VIRUSES and BACTERIA

  16. Bacteria • Earliest form of life (3 billion years ago) • Prokaryotic cells (no organelles, no nucleus) • Single celled • have a cell wall

  17. Bacteria • 3 shapes: • Cocci (spherical) • Bacilli (rod shaped) • Spirilla (spirals)

  18. Bacteria • Use flagella to “swim” or produce thick coats of slime to “slide” around

  19. How Bacteria Infect • Give off chemicals called toxins that can make us sick • Our body fights off bacterial infections using antibodies

  20. Viruses • Single-celled • Not considered living • Cannot reproduce on their own • Cannot move on their own • Called “particles” or “agents” • About 4,000 different types of viruses

  21. Viruses • Have genetic material (DNA or RNA) enclosed in a capsid • Some viruses have a viral envelope covering their capsid(taken from host cell) • sneaky

  22. How Viruses Infect • Lytic cycle • 1. entry into cell • 2. replicate DNA • 3. make viral proteins • 4. assemble new generation • 5. exit from infected cell—host cell bursts open (lyses) and virus is released into the environment, host cell dies • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3DP-MAhr0YY

  23. How Viruses Infect • Lysogenic cycle (sneaky!) • 1. entry into cell • 2. DNA incorporated into host cell’s DNA • 3. host cell copies chromosomes • 4. host cell divides and replicates—all new cells have virus’ DNA incorporated into their own • 5. steps 3-5 from lytic cycle • http://wrate.me.vccs.edu/courses/env108/lesson2_4.htm

  24. Microbiology Lab—Microbes Around Us • Swab Demo:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2U6usyE80io • Note: we will not be wetting our swabs in distilled de-ionized water as the video says

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