Articles for tag: Paralysis, Polio, Poliomyelitis

What is Bulbar Poliomyelitis?

Acute poliomyelitis is a highly contagious viral disease which ranges in severity from inapparent infection to overwhelming paralytic illness and death. The virus is spread by human contact and enters through the nose or mouth, then spreading to various parts of the body. Poliomyelitis is particularly liable to affect certain parts of the spinal cord, ...

Polio: Is the End in Sight?

Polio is a paralytic disease caused by a short, single-stranded RNA virus. Poliovirus is currently found as 2 serotypes in nature: Wild PolioVirus Type1 (WPV1), and Wild PolioVirus Type 3 (WPV3), [Type 2 has been eliminated globally]. In nature, poliovirus causes poliomyelitis* only in human beings. In less than 1% of poliovirus infections, acute flaccid ...

Karla News

Should Animal Experimentation Be Permitted?

The main debate questions the ethical and moral implications of using animal experimentation in for biomedical research. Should animals be assigned the same moral status as human beings? If animal research is halted due to ethical and moral considerations, how will new biomedical treatments be tested? Where should the line be drawn between animals that ...

Karla News

The Polio Virus: Lifecycle

Polio is an infectious disease that has haunted the lives of many for over 3,000 years. The first record of Poliomyelitis in the human body dates back to ancient Egypt where inhabitants of the area engraved a documented version of paralytic Poliomyelitis into stone. When indoor plumbing came into use, in the 20th century, and ...

How Viruses Grow and How They Are Treated

Particles or microbes too small to be seen with an ordinary microscope, viruses range in size from that of a large molecule to about half the size of a small bacterium (from 0.00001 millimeter to 0.0005 millimeter). They can be photographed, however, under an electron microscope which has a magnetic field for a lens and ...