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Thursday, January 8, 2015

Medical help for Body defenses

MEDICAL ASSISTS FOR BODY DEFENSES 

On a May day in 1796, an English country physician, Edward Jenner, opened a new era in combatting disease-the age of immune therapy as a preventive. A smallpox epidemic had struck, but not as hard in rural areas as in larger cities. Jenner wondered about that and about the cow- pox infection many people in his village contracted from cattle. 

Cowpox caused only a running sore that quickly healed. But was the disease related in any way to smallpox? Did exposure to cowpox provide immunity against smallpox? To test his theory, Jenner made a small cut in an arm of an 11-year- old boy patient and applied to it pus taken from a cowpox sore on a dairymaid's hand.

The boy developed a mild case of cowpox and was soon over it. Then Jenner made the critical test, applying to cut pus from a smallpox patient. The boy did not get smallpox; he was immune. Here was the first use of the fact that a mild attack of some diseases may prevent full-fledged illness from occurring. It took a long time before Jenner's work was accepted. 

Almost a century went by before Louis Pasteur of France used much the same technique to inoculate against rabies. Since then-slowly at first, now with increasing rapidity -vaccines have been developed to protect against many diseases. Whatever the vaccine, the principle is the same: to introduce material specially treated so that, without causing actual disease, it causes the body to develop defenses against the disease.


The immunity produced by such vaccination is active; the individual himself manufactures antibodies that will protect him. Another form of immunity, passive, involves injection of antibody material created in the body of another person or an animal. Passive immunity usually does not last very long. 

Everyone should be immunized against these dangerous diseases: smallpox, diphtheria, polio, tetanus, sometimes typhoid fever, and, in the case of children, whooping cough and measles. Inoculations are readily obtainable, virtually free of discomfort, can be administered by family physician or pediatrician, and are available free, or at little cost, so lack of money should not, and must not, keep anyone from being immunized. 

Any public health department or hospital can provide information about low-cost or no-cost immunizations. It is particularly important to give children the advantages of protection against diseases that could be extremely dangerous for them. 

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