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anthrax |
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anthraxDisease of livestock, occasionally transmitted to humans, usually via infected hides and fleeces. It may also be used as a weapon in biological warfare. It develops as black skin pustules or severe pneumonia. Treatment is possible with antibiotics, and vaccination is effective. Anthrax is caused by a bacillus (Bacillus anthracis). In the 17th century, some 60,000 cattle died in a European pandemic known as the Black Bane, thought to have been anthrax. The disease is described by the Roman poet Virgil and may have been the cause of the biblical fifth plague of Egypt.
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Gastrointestinal anthrax may result in pharyngeal lesions, with sore throat, difficulty swallowing, marked neck swelling, and regional enlargement of the lymph nodes, or with intestinal infection characterized by fever, severe abdominal pain, massive accumulation of serous fluids in the abdominal cavity, vomiting of blood, and bloody diarrhea. Gastrointestinal anthrax can lead to vomiting, loss of appetite, nausea, and diarrhea; without antibiotics, the death rate is 25 to 60 percent. Gastrointestinal anthrax is the result of the deposition and germination of spores in the upper or lower gastrointestinal tract. |
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