Deadly New Pathogens Before COVID
By James Donahue
The COVID and now the Omicron pathogens have brought humanity to its knees since they began to appear two years ago. But deadly new mystery diseases have been sweeping the planet for a few years earlier. And researchers say we can expect more to come after this.
We have all heard about the strange swine and avian flu virus mixed in with a couple of human forms of the disease. It killed folks in Mexico when it first appeared then mellowed out as a relatively bland form of influenza as it continued to sweep the planet.
After this, deadly new forms of tuberculosis and streptococcus infections that are immune to nearly every form of antibiotic known to medicine began appearing.
Then we have the other stuff:
West Nile Virus that has been sweeping the world via the tiny mosquito. Not always deadly, this bug has the capacity to make its victims very sick and eradicate the weak and the elderly.
And we know all about the threat of the Mad Cow prion in our meat. And the sudden spread of hoof and mouth disease not only among cattle, but also zoo animals and the wild deer herds. We even hear stories about people catching hoof and mouth disease, although for us it is not a fatal illness.
There are other new super bugs out there that are also killing people.
The dreaded E.bola virus keeps cropping up in the jungles of Africa where medical teams are still tracking its source. This is a real horror of a bug because the people who get it literally bleed to death. They go down with blood even flowing from their eyes. E.bola also cropped lately in Pakistan and even one case in the United States.
Remember when teenagers and college students began dropping dead from a form of bacterial meningitis that kills almost without warning. The victims complain first of a fever and sore throat. They suddenly get very sick and are dead within hours. One anguished parent said that by the time they realized it wasn't the flu, it was too late. The disease breaks out in clusters, killing perhaps two, three or five children in one area, and then it is gone. The source of this disease, and why it singles out teenagers, appears to remain a mystery.
A three-year-old California toddler died after a rare amoeba infected her brain. The girl remained in a coma for two days before the organism killed her. How she contacted the amoeba is a mystery.
In West Bengal, India, 45 people in the town of Siliguri died and another 66 were very sick from a mystery disease that later was identified as a measles virus, researchers at the National Institute of Communicable Diseases reported.
Another mystery disease in Japeri, Brazil, killed seven people and left 43 seriously ill. The disease, which broke out in two neighborhoods, brings on muscle pains, headache, fever, diarrhea and hemorrhaging.
The deadly anthrax killed a 34-year-old woman in Chimkent, Kazakhstan. The town was plagued by anthrax, which was thought to have started from tainted meat sold at an open air market. The town remained under quarantine for months.
What is going on here?
Dr. Andrew Cunningham, a veterinary pathologist at the Zoological Society of London, says human encroachment into wildlife habitats seems to be having a bad effect on both man and beast. Not only are we passing human diseases like tuberculosis and measles on to the animals, the animals seem to be passing new strains of disease on to us. The COVID virus has recently been found in deer.
Cunningham believes the risk is seriously underestimated. "Historically we've always thought of the main threats to biodiversity as being habitat destruction and chemical pollution," he said. "In fact, pathogen pollution appears to be taking over as the main threat.
"As the rate of infectious diseases increases in wildlife, then the chances of humans getting novel diseases also increases. There will be terrors out there that are going to catch us by surprise," Cunningham said.
Indeed, the serious effects caused by our heating planet are also considered a factor. As the central part of the Earth gets hotter and hotter, animals and biting insects are moving north into populated nations like Europe, Asia and North America, and South into Australia.
By James Donahue
The COVID and now the Omicron pathogens have brought humanity to its knees since they began to appear two years ago. But deadly new mystery diseases have been sweeping the planet for a few years earlier. And researchers say we can expect more to come after this.
We have all heard about the strange swine and avian flu virus mixed in with a couple of human forms of the disease. It killed folks in Mexico when it first appeared then mellowed out as a relatively bland form of influenza as it continued to sweep the planet.
After this, deadly new forms of tuberculosis and streptococcus infections that are immune to nearly every form of antibiotic known to medicine began appearing.
Then we have the other stuff:
West Nile Virus that has been sweeping the world via the tiny mosquito. Not always deadly, this bug has the capacity to make its victims very sick and eradicate the weak and the elderly.
And we know all about the threat of the Mad Cow prion in our meat. And the sudden spread of hoof and mouth disease not only among cattle, but also zoo animals and the wild deer herds. We even hear stories about people catching hoof and mouth disease, although for us it is not a fatal illness.
There are other new super bugs out there that are also killing people.
The dreaded E.bola virus keeps cropping up in the jungles of Africa where medical teams are still tracking its source. This is a real horror of a bug because the people who get it literally bleed to death. They go down with blood even flowing from their eyes. E.bola also cropped lately in Pakistan and even one case in the United States.
Remember when teenagers and college students began dropping dead from a form of bacterial meningitis that kills almost without warning. The victims complain first of a fever and sore throat. They suddenly get very sick and are dead within hours. One anguished parent said that by the time they realized it wasn't the flu, it was too late. The disease breaks out in clusters, killing perhaps two, three or five children in one area, and then it is gone. The source of this disease, and why it singles out teenagers, appears to remain a mystery.
A three-year-old California toddler died after a rare amoeba infected her brain. The girl remained in a coma for two days before the organism killed her. How she contacted the amoeba is a mystery.
In West Bengal, India, 45 people in the town of Siliguri died and another 66 were very sick from a mystery disease that later was identified as a measles virus, researchers at the National Institute of Communicable Diseases reported.
Another mystery disease in Japeri, Brazil, killed seven people and left 43 seriously ill. The disease, which broke out in two neighborhoods, brings on muscle pains, headache, fever, diarrhea and hemorrhaging.
The deadly anthrax killed a 34-year-old woman in Chimkent, Kazakhstan. The town was plagued by anthrax, which was thought to have started from tainted meat sold at an open air market. The town remained under quarantine for months.
What is going on here?
Dr. Andrew Cunningham, a veterinary pathologist at the Zoological Society of London, says human encroachment into wildlife habitats seems to be having a bad effect on both man and beast. Not only are we passing human diseases like tuberculosis and measles on to the animals, the animals seem to be passing new strains of disease on to us. The COVID virus has recently been found in deer.
Cunningham believes the risk is seriously underestimated. "Historically we've always thought of the main threats to biodiversity as being habitat destruction and chemical pollution," he said. "In fact, pathogen pollution appears to be taking over as the main threat.
"As the rate of infectious diseases increases in wildlife, then the chances of humans getting novel diseases also increases. There will be terrors out there that are going to catch us by surprise," Cunningham said.
Indeed, the serious effects caused by our heating planet are also considered a factor. As the central part of the Earth gets hotter and hotter, animals and biting insects are moving north into populated nations like Europe, Asia and North America, and South into Australia.