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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The hemolysis of sheep red blood cells by
typhus
rickettsiae is initiated by a temperature-sensitive adsorption process that is dependent on the energy-generating metabolism of the rickettsaie but not that of the erythrocyte. Adsorption is followed by events dependent on the metabolism of both the rickettsaie and red blood cells. At 34 C the adsorption step is complete after about 4 min, at lower temperatures the time required for adsorption is increased. At 0 C no adsorption occurred. The addition of cyanide inhibited the catabolism of glutamate by the rickettsiae and, consequently, both adsorption and the subsequent steps in hemolysis. The
starvation
of the rickettsiae for glutamate also prevented adsorption. Fluoride had no demonstrable effect on rickettsial metabolism nor the adsorption step but inhibited glycolysis in the erythrocytes and the hemolysis of the erythrocytes by rickettsiae.
...
PMID:Rickettsial hemolysis: effect of metabolic inhibitors upon hemolysis and adsorption. 420 61
The control of rRNA synthesis in the etiological agent of epidemic
typhus
, Rickettsia prowazekii, a slowly growing obligate intracytoplasmic bacterium, was investigated. Transcription of the rickettsial 16S rRNA gene (rrs), of which there is only a single copy, was controlled by a single promoter region, and the site for the initiation of transcription (base A) was found 117 bp upstream of the rrs coding region for the mature product. The promoter region contained an Escherichia coli promoter-like sequence, TTGACA-N17-TATAAC, centered 139 bp upstream of the coding region for the mature product. To investigate whether transcription of the rickettsial rrs responds to amino acid
starvation
conditions, total RNA was isolated from R. prowazekii-infected mouse L929 cells with or without methionine
starvation
. The level of newly synthesized 16S rRNA precursors in R. prowazekii, as analyzed by ribonuclease protection assays, decreased significantly after methionine
starvation
for 6 h and then recovered within 12 h after the addition of methionine. The chemical half-lives of the 16S rRNA precursors in the methionine-starved rickettsiae did not differ significantly from those in the normal rickettsiae. These results suggest that R. prowazekii regulates transcription of the rrs in response to amino acid
starvation
conditions.
...
PMID:Transcriptional analysis of the 16s rRNA gene in Rickettsia prowazekii. 862 5
In this article devoted to Poland's direct and indirect role in the elaboration of contemporary international health structures and to her reputation as an epidemic reservoir of Europe, we consider how Poland came to be perceived as the cordon sanitaire of the West. Traditionally seen as upholding Western values, in the 19th and 20th centuries the country became increasingly associated with "Eastern plagues"-cholera and then
typhus
-coming from Russia and which could spread to the rest of Europe if Poland did not manage to contain them. When Poland was reconstituted as a nation-state in 1918, the new country won international recognition through her successful attempts to contain a
typhus
epidemic sweeping westwards from Russia. The Polish government convened the first European, League sponsored, health conference following the First World War. A Polish doctor, L. RAJCHMAN, was chosen to head up the League of Nations Health Organisation (forerunner of the WHO) and later (1946) founded UNICEF. Finally, we examine the key issue of exanthematous
typhus
in both world wars, exemplifying how a disease can come to be "ideologized", in this case by Nazi Germany.
Typhus
was the pretext used- in the name of "public health"-for segregating Polish citizens of Jewish origin and even killing them. Paradoxically,
typhus
was in the process of being eradicated when the war began and German policy of mass resettlements, sequestration, and
starvation
only spurred the epidemic they supposedly wished to control.
...
PMID:[Poland: cholera to typhus, 1831-1950]. 1069 Apr 75
The British Army liberated the German concentration camp at Belsen on April 15, 1945. The thousands of inmates (estimates range from 60,000 to 78,900 inmates), mostly Jews from eastern Europe, were dying at a rate of 500-600 per day from disease, and many more were being killed by the German guards and co-workers. Diseases prevalent included
typhus
, tuberculosis, nutritional and infective diarrhoea, severe malnutrition and
starvation
, and others. Despite huge obstacles including the ongoing war effort, shortages of supplies, and limited numbers of workers, a relief operation was rapidly organized to control the
typhus
epidemic and salvage as many inmates as possible. The 10,000 emaciated corpses which had been lying all over the camp were collected and buried in mass graves. Inmates were disinfected with D.D.T., scrubbed in a "human laundry," and evacuated from the
typhus
-ridden Horror Camp (Camp 1) to a hospital organized in the barracks of the Panzer Training School (Camp 2). Feeding of the inmates was carefully regulated, and some basic medical treatment organized. The relief operation was performed by British Army units, detachments of the British Red Cross, British and Belgian medical students, and other volunteers including those from among the less debilitated inmates. Although 13,000 inmates died after the liberation despite the relief operation, thousands of others were rescued.
...
PMID:Rescue of the remnants: the British emergency medical relief operation in Belsen Camp 1945. 1176 10
In the nineteenth century travelling by ship became faster due to the introduction of the steam engine. Population growth, economic crises and food shortages forced millions of Italians to consider migration towards the Americas as a real opportunity. Travel conditions on ships and steamers were particularly difficult. People were crammed into dormitories where ventilation was poor, food was insufficient, hygiene was appalling and promiscuity was rife. Under such conditions, epidemics of cholera,
typhus
and measles were all too likely to develop, but mycobacterium tuberculosis also proliferated. The health authorities attempted to block the spread of epidemics by means of either health licenses - papers certifying good health of the crew and passengers, which had to be exhibited on arrival - or quarantine, involving the ship and all its contents, if infectious diseases were detected or suspicious deaths occurred during the ship's voyage. In this article the particularly unfortunate stories of Italian immigrants, who boarded ships and steamers, are reported. In the second half of the nineteenth century, but also in the first decades of the twentieth, millions of Italians whose aim was to reach the Americas paid a very high price. Italy did not provide acceptable living conditions for millions of farmers and town-dwellers, and migration in search of work was in many cases the only solution. Although many during their sea voyages became ill or died of
starvation
or infectious diseases, migration, supported by hope, continued.
...
PMID:[Epidemics on the sea: migrants journeys in the nineteenth century]. 2611 Mar 4
This article explores medical thought on the impact of the influenza pandemic of 1918 in Mexico. It analyzes scientific ideas on the etiology of the flu, as reflected in the types of remedies and medical prescriptions published in the press and in health bulletins. It then goes deeper into the topic by examining the international historic context, dominated by the war. In Mexico, years of armed conflict unleashed by the Revolution exacerbated living conditions among the population:
starvation
,
typhus
, smallpox and other infectious diseases were present before and during the outbreak of the pandemic. This study is based on archival documentation, health bulletins, press sources from the period, and modern bibliography.
...
PMID:[Therapeutic remedies and medical propaganda on influenza in Mexico in 1918: ideas and knowledge sets]. 3266 13
The highly dependent interplay of disease, famine, war, and society is examined based on an extreme period during World War II. Using mathematical modeling, we reassess events during the Holocaust that led to the liquidation of the Warsaw Ghetto (1941-1942), with the eventual goal of deliberately killing ~450,000, mostly Jewish residents, many through widespread
starvation
and a large-scale
typhus
epidemic. The Nazis justified genocide supposedly to control the spread of disease. This exemplifies humanity's ability to turn upon itself, based on racially guided epidemiological principles, merely because of the appearance of a bacterium. Deadly disease and
starvation
dynamics are explored using modeling and the maths of food ration cards. Strangely, the epidemic was curtailed and was brought to a sudden halt before winter, when
typhus
normally accelerates. A far more massive epidemic outbreak was prevented through the antiepidemic efforts by the often considered incompetent and corrupt ghetto leadership and the Herculean efforts of ghetto doctors.
...
PMID:Extraordinary curtailment of massive typhus epidemic in the Warsaw Ghetto. 3292 6