Title: Biological Agents of Warfare and Terrorism
1Biological Agents of Warfare and Terrorism
- Lecture Week 12
- Medical Microbiology SBM 2044
2Deliberately Emerging Infections
- These microbes have been developed by man for
nefarious use - Deliberate refers to
- naturally occurring microbial agents such as
anthrax - bioengineered microorganisms such as those
created by the insertion of genetic virulence
factors that produce or exacerbate disease
3Biological weapons
- Bioterrorism the malevolent use of bacteria,
viruses or toxins against humans, animals or
plants in an attempt to cause harm and to create
fear - Biological weapons are inexpensive
- Nuclear and chemical weapons are 800-600 times
more costly to develop - Produce fear and panic ? overwhelm health care
resources and destabilise government - Attention and understanding (of treatment) on
bioterrorism is important to avoid this imminent
threat to national security
4History
- Black Death of the 14th century
- When the Tartars catapulted plague victims over
the unassailable city walls in Kaffa - Killed 50 million of people, that is almost half
of the Europe at that time - 1763, British troops in America used
smallpox-infected blankets against the American
Indians - 1984, an attempt to affect election in a small
Oregon town, the Rajneeshees cult poisoned 10
restaurant salad bars with Salmonella typhimurium
and sickened more than 700 people
5Tentative chronology of the initial spread of
plague in the mid-14th century
6Plague
- In the Islamic world, the Black Death had a
particularly devastating effect militarily and
economically. The rapid spread of the Plague
through armies affected the outcome of several
minor wars throughout the Islamic world. Even the
strong Mamluk warriors in Egypt was sufficiently
devastated by the Plague that the decline in its
military capabilities was a significant factor in
its demise and eventual defeat to the Ottoman
Empire in the early 16th century. - Also, the Muslim historian Ibn Khaldun, lost his
parents to the Black Death.
7The plague was accompanied by chaos and panic.
People could not understand for what they were
being punished.
8Plague
- Also known as the Black Death, began in 1346 and
wiped out ½ of Europe - Pandemics of plague have ceased with the advent
of antibiotics and improved rodent control - But the outbreaks still occur
- Yersinia pestis as a biological weapon
- is relatively stable in the environment
- 100-500 organisms are enough to cause infection
9Zoonotic infection of rodents
10Anthrax
- Caused by ________ that forms stable endospores
when nutrients are limited - The spores is the infectious particle
- naturally stable, resistant to destruction
(heat, dessication) - the weaponization of anthrax spores by drying
and milling generates a unit spores size - Symptoms
- Illness begins 1 to 6 days after exposure
- Flulike fever, myalgia, malaise
- Haemorrhagic mediastinitis (apparent on
radiograph) - Shortness of breath, strident cough, chills
- Death as the bacilli spread throughout the body
in high numbers
11Treatment for anthrax
- Antibiotics, to be administered prophylactically
after spore exposure - Bacillus anthracis is susceptible to
fluoroquinolones, tetracyclines, most other
antibiotics - Anthrax vaccine for military personnel,
researchers
12Smallpox
- 1977 in Somalia, the last naturally occurring
case of smallpox - 1980 WHO certified the world free of smallpox
- Infection could spread rapidly from
person-to-person, by aerosol release - Prevention vaccination with live vaccinia virus
13Infectious period starts at the onset of
fever Within 2-4 days of fever onset, patient
will develop a maculopapular rash on the mucosa
of the mouth, pharynx and arms. Then spreads to
the trunk and legs
Figure shows pocks or sores which marked faces
and limbs of smallpox patients.
14Conclusion
- Terrorists might favour biological weapons than
nuclear or chemical ones, for mass destruction
because - bioweapons are easy to obtain
- bioweapons are cheap to produce in large
quantities - bioweapons are highly effective in creating
human morbidity and panic
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