
Above: The characteristic "Coccobacillus" shape (stubby rods) of B. Perstussis
Pathogen: Bordetella pertussis (I guess pertussis means "violent cough")
A short history -
- 1906 - Jules Bordet and Octave Gengou are the first to cultivate B. pertussis. This is a very important step as in order to be prove an organism is the etiological cause of disease one must be able to isolate the bacterium in pure culture ( see Koch's postulates).
- 1930s - Development of a "whole-cell" vaccine. The first Bordetella vaccine was essentially killed B. pertussis bacteria. The dead cells were enough to illicit an immune response and cause activation and production of adaptive immune cells.
- 1947 - Childhood vaccination becomes routine. The DTP vaccine (Diphtheria, Tetanus, Pertussis) was very effective (90%).
- 1970s - Concerns about the vaccine arose. Common symptoms included redness, swelling, fever and pain (these are common with almost any vaccine). The main concern was a low frequency of seizures (1/100,00) that was associated but never proven to be caused by the vaccine.
- 1980s - Outbreak of pertussis in Great Britain where mothers were opting out of getting their children vaccinated.
- 1990s - A new vaccine is developed made of purified protein parts of B. pertussis. This vaccine undergoes several different permutations (Tripedia, Infanrix, Daptacel, Boostrix, and Adacel) reaching an efficacy level of 85%. Not quite as effective as original, but fewer side effects.

1 comment:
Frogs? Raining frogs? I love it. Test message . Can you take Latin as a language at UCLA?
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