A new study has revealed that plague, which is often considered to be a disease of the past, is still a threat in many parts of the world.
A new study has revealed that plague, which is often considered to be a disease of the past, is still a threat in many parts of the world.
The study published in PLoS Medicine , is by Nils Stenseth, Department of Biology at the University of Oslo, Norwayof Oslo, Norway.The study also reveals that the number of countries reporting plague has increased in recent decades.
Nils Stenseth, a researcher at the Department of Biology at the University re-emerging.
The plague bacillus, Yersinia pestis, causes several thousand human cases per year.
A major shift in cases from Asia to Africa has been observed over recent years. Madagascar, Tanzania, Mozambique, Malawi, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are the regions where 90 per cent of all cases and deaths took place in the last five years.
Most of such cases are of bubonic plague that spreads through contract with infected rodents and fleas, though outbreaks of pneumonic plague that is directly transmitted from human to human still occur.
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“Plague may not match the so-called ‘big three’ diseases (malaria, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis) in numbers of current cases, but it far exceeds them in pathogenicity and rapid spread under the right conditions,” say the authors.
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Source-ANI
ANN/C