Smallpox : Different Types and their Symptoms

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Smallpox: Different Types and their Symptoms

Smallpox as a devastating disease for thousands of years – it killed 300 million people just during the 20th century. There are two forms of the virus: Variola major (the deadlier) and Variola minor. Richard Preston in The Demon in the Freezer describes its effects on the body saying, “The virus had stripped the skin off the body, both inside and out, and the pain… seemed almost beyond the capacity of human nature to endure” (Sherman, pg 197). The two strains of smallpox discussed in this paper give insight to the symptoms of the now eradicated smallpox. Fulminating smallpox was insanely hard to detect, because the patient usually died before symptoms of smallpox could even appear. Malignant confluent smallpox had a much longer course of infection – it could last for a little over two weeks before claiming the patient’s life. Although these two forms were rare, every type of smallpox (if survived) would leave disfiguring scars on the face, known as pockmarks. Edward Jenner used the fact that milkmaids had fair complexions free from pockmarks to his advantage, and came up with his famed vaccine. Overall, much can be learned from smallpox, the only major human disease to have been eradicated.

A scourge that could topple entire empires within weeks, an enemy that was blind to race, gender, age, or class, smallpox left its mark on those that were able to survive. Smallpox, or the variola virus could easily wipe out entire cities (Irwin W. Sherman, pg 191-192) and was a plague that was nearly impossible to cure, yet it is now the only virus that has been successfully eradicated- the World Health Organization proclaimed it to be eradicated in 1979 (World Health Organization, pa...

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...it plagued mankind for 3,000 years (Sherman, pg 204). It changed human history while it thrived, as it did with its death. Smallpox is proof that medicine has the power to rid the world of the many diseases that plague the world today.

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