Literature DB >> 10230264

The major epidemic infections: a gift from the Old World to the New?

R Sessa1, C Palagiano, M G Scifoni, M di Pietro, M Del Piano.   

Abstract

With the discovery of the New World, the Europeans flocked to America and with them spread infectious diseases. During long sea voyages the agents of these diseases increased their diffusion capacity in a suitable environment. Lack of hygiene, fatigue and privations, a diet without vitamins and many persons kept in confined spaces were the essential features of this environment. Sick persons, whose health conditions worsened during the journey to the New World, carried the germs of infectious diseases. The first disease to appear in the New World was smallpox described in 1518 in Hispaniola. From there the disease moved rapidly to Mexico in 1520, exterminating most of the Aztecs, Guatemala and to the territories of Incas from 1525-26, killing most of them and the King himself. The second disease, influenza, appeared in La Isabela, a few years later, causing a heavy epidemic between 1558 and 1559. Other diseases followed such as yellow fever and malaria. So Europeans and these invisible and mortal agents caused enormous destruction of American populations. In fact historians have estimated that beginning from early 1500, in only 50 years the population of Peru and Mexico fell from 60 to 10 million; in the latter country, in one century, the populations fell from an initial 10 million to only 2 million.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10230264

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Panminerva Med        ISSN: 0031-0808            Impact factor:   5.197


  8 in total

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Review 4.  Generation of individual diversity: a too neglected fundamental property of adaptive immune system.

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Authors:  Rachel L Graham; Damon J Deming; Meagan E Deming; Boyd L Yount; Ralph S Baric
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6.  Comment on the article “With regard to the bicentennial of the independence of Colombia: Reading practices of Antonio Nariño and the development of a presumably effective vaccine against smallpox

Authors:  Esteban Vanegas
Journal:  Biomedica       Date:  2021-07-15       Impact factor: 0.935

Review 7.  Hepatitis C virus in American Indian/Alaskan Native and Aboriginal peoples of North America.

Authors:  Julia D Rempel; Julia Uhanova
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 5.048

8.  Redefining the immune system as a social interface for cooperative processes.

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  8 in total

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