DANCEST 805 Lecture Notes - Lecture 50: Borrelia, Lassa Virus, Poliovirus

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Heyman (2015) emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases. Infectious organisms reproduce rapidly, mutate frequently, cross the species barrier between animal hosts and humans, and adapt with relative ease to their new environments. Because of this, infectious organisms are able to alter their epidemiology, virulence and their susceptibility to anti-infective drugs. When disease is caused by an organism that is newly identified and not known previously to infect humans or has changed in susceptibility to an anti-infectious drug. When disease is caused by an infectious organism previously known to infect humans that has re-entered human populations or changed in epidemiology. It is estimated that up to 70 per cent or more of all emerging infectious have a source in animals (zoonotic infections). Infected humans may become ill or remain asymptomatic: once infected, human-to-human transmission may or may not occur. If it occurs, it may be limited to one, two, or more generations, or it may be sustained indefinitely.

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