Human Disease.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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disease can be transmitted through food infected with mutated proteins.
B Spread of Infectious Disease
Some pathogens are spread from one person to another by direct contact.
They leave the first person through body openings, mucous membranes, and skin wounds,and they enter the second person through similar channels.
For example, the viruses that cause respiratory diseases such as influenza and the common cold are spreadin moisture droplets when an infected person coughs or sneezes.
A hand that was used to cover the mouth while coughing contains viruses that may be passed todoorknobs, so that the next person to touch the doorknob has a chance of picking up the infectious agent.
The bacteria that cause some sexually transmitted infections,including gonorrhea and syphilis, are transmitted during sexual contact.
Other pathogens involve an intermediary carrier, such as an insect.
The malarial parasite, for example, spends part of its life cycle in mosquitoes, then enters a person'sbloodstream when the mosquito bites the person.
Many pathogens are spread through contaminated food and water.
Cholera bacteria, for example, are spread throughfood and water contaminated with the excrement of infected people.
C 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.
Theyears 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, andtuberculosis.
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 newdiseases, 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-Hodgkin’slymphoma, 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 identifieduntil after an outbreak in 1976 at an American Legion convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Once identified, however, scientists were able to retrospectively identifyearlier 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 surfacedin 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 contactwith 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 givenannually, 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 nextyear.
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 feweroptions for treating the diseases and preventing their spread.
III NONINFECTIOUS DISEASE
Diseases not known to be caused by infectious agents include the three leading killers in the United States and other developed countries: heart disease, most cancers,and cerebrovascular disease (decreased blood circulation in the brain).
Noninfectious illnesses include disorders as terrifying as Alzheimer's disease, which robs victimsof their memory and their ability to reason, and as pesky as poison ivy.
Degenerative disorders, including arthritis, Parkinson disease, and Alzheimer's disease, involve the progressive breakdown of tissues and loss of function of parts of thebody.
Joints gradually become stiff; bones become brittle; blood vessels become blocked by deposits of fat.
The incidence of these problems increases with age ( see Aging), and, in at least some cases, progression can be slowed by good health habits.
Environmental factors play critical roles in numerous noninfectious diseases.
Exposure to carbon monoxide can have long-term effects on the heart and vision.
Lead indrinking water can impair children's mental abilities and increase blood pressure in adults.
Occupational exposure to coal dust, cotton dust, and asbestos predisposesworkers to black lung, brown lung, asbestosis, and other respiratory diseases ( see Occupational and Environmental Diseases).
Exposure to radiation can damage cells and cause diseases, including cancer (Biological Radiation Effects).
Other diseases are caused by an addiction to a harmful substance.
Tobacco smoking is a prime culpritin emphysema, as well as lung cancer and other respiratory diseases.
Excessive use of alcohol can lead to liver disease, brain damage, and nutritional disorders.
Repetitive stress injuries result from repeating certain motions, usually from a fixed or awkward posture.
Twisting items on a factory assembly line, carrying bulgingmailbags, using vibrating tools such as pneumatic hammers, or practicing the piano or a tennis stroke for hours on end can all result in pain, inflammation, andpermanent nerve damage.
A Hereditary and Congenital Diseases
Hereditary diseases such as hemophilia, sickle-cell anemia, Huntington's disease, muscular dystrophy, and Tay-Sachs disease are caused by mutated genes inheritedfrom one or both parents ( see Genetic Disorders).
Certain other diseases, such as diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and some types of cancer, often run in families, which suggests that heredity is at least partially responsible for their development.
Congenital diseases, or birth defects, are disorders that are present at birth.
Some are hereditary, others develop while a baby is in its mother's uterus or during theprocess of delivery.
For example, if the mother contracts German measles, or rubella, during the early stages of pregnancy, her child may be born with heart defects,eye cataracts, deafness, or mental retardation.
Use of alcohol during pregnancy can cause fetal alcohol syndrome, characterized by mental and physical retardation.Abnormal development of any body part in a fetus may produce a congenital defect; for example, if walls that separate the chambers of the heart fail to formcompletely, the baby is born with congenital heart disease.
B Immunological Diseases.
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Liens utiles
- TRAITÉ DE LA NATURE HUMAINE, A Treatise of Human Nature de David Hume (résumé & analyse)
- CONDITION DE L'HOMME MODERNE, The Human Condition, 1958. Hannah Arendt (résumé)
- to be human is to be in relation
- Human Rights Machinery
- sida (syndrome d'immunodéficience acquise), terme qui regroupe l'ensemble desmanifestations pathologiques provoquées par un rétrovirus, le virus VIH (virus del'immunodéficience humaine), ou HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) selon la terminologieanglo-saxonne.