How we conquered the deadly smallpox virus - Simona Zompi
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For 10,000 years, humanity suffered from the scourge of smallpox. The virus killed almost a third of its victims within two weeks and left survivors horribly scarred. But Simona Zompi commends the brave souls – a Buddhist nun, a boy, a cow, a dairymaid and physician Edward Jenner – who first stopped the spread of this disastrous disease, to make us smallpox-free today.
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Cowpox and smallpox viruses belong to the family of Poxviruses, which are the largest and most complex viruses known so far. They are double-stranded DNA viruses of 130-300 kilobase pair.Smallpox is also know by the Latin name ‘Variola’, derived from “varus”, which means pimple or pox, named after the characteristic umbilicated pimples filled with pus that form on people’s faces, limbs and torsos. It is this Latin name that gave the name to “variolation” used to describe inoculation of smallpox virus.
The Cowpox virus was subsequently used and gave birth to “vaccination.” The virus used in the modern vaccine is called the Vaccinia virus, from the Latin term “vaca,” meaning cow. Vaccinia virus is a big mystery in virology. It is not known whether Vaccinia virus is the product of genetic recombination, or if it is a species derived from Cowpox virus or Variola virus by prolonged serial passage in the laboratory. It is this Latin term however that gave the name to “vaccination,” which was subsequently employed as a generic term for defining the use of an attenuated or killed pathogen inoculated in humans in order to develop an immune response against that pathogen.
Dr. Matthew Maty (1718-1776), a Dutch physician who later worked as the principal librarian of the British Museum in London, foresaw the eradication of smallpox in his book “The Advantages of Early Inoculation” in 1767.
Eradication of smallpox became possible after the endorsement of vaccination and mass production of the vaccine. In 1864 French doctors started exploring the possibility of using lymph from calves infected with cowpox virus as vaccine. The use of animal lymph reduced transmission of human diseases, such as syphilis, and helped increase the production of the vaccine.
Dr. Leslie Collier, a scientist from Paris, France, further developed a freeze-drying method to produce a heat-stable formula of the vaccine in the late 1940’s. Collier added a key component, peptone, to the process. This addition protected the virus, making it practical to distribute the vaccine worldwide.
In 1965, Dr. Benjamin Rubin patented the bifurcated needle, which allowed using less material for the vaccination. In 1967, the World Health Organization launched the Intensified Smallpox Eradication Program, which led to the disappearance of smallpox.Smallpox has been used as a war weapon in the past. Infected people would be sent among soldiers to decimate them, as it happened in 1776 in Quebec (related in Ian Glynn and Jenifer Glynn book “The Life and Death so Smallpox”) or during George Washington’s siege of Boston in 1775.
Smallpox is not circulating anymore, but a few vials of the virus are kept in highly sophisticated and protected BSL4 (biosafety level 4) laboratories at US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, United States and the State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology VECTOR in Koltsovo, Russia. Should they be destroyed or not? Is there a risk for bioterrorist attack? This controversy is subject for another chapter!
To learn more about smallpox, check the CDC website.In our increasingly globalized world, a single infected person can board a plane and spread a virus across continents. Mark Honigsbaum describes the history of pandemics and how that knowledge can help halt future outbreaks.
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Meet The Creators
- Educator Simona Zompi
- Producer Aaron Augenblick
- Director Katie Wendt
- Compositor Kristofer Wollinger
- Narrator Addison Anderson