10 Important Facts about Polio
- The disease known as Polio, not only paralyses it's victims, but drowns them in their own dementia gilded ropes. The disease travels fast and reaps not only what it can sow from the human population, It takes more than it can get. Polio is caused by an infection by the poliovirus, sometimes It's possible for it to be transmitted through oral-oral transmissions. Those usually involve contact through/with infected respiratory systems or exchange between saliva.
- Poliomyelitis has a vast history, dating back from as early as the 19th century. It was first recognized in England of 1789, outbreaks have not occurred in the United States until 1843, where vaccinations would soon be discovered. For years on end polio has become more and more severe in regard to epidemics. The average age of affected people rose and the number of repulsive deaths did as well. In 1952, polio finally arrived in the U.S. with a whopping 21,000 people with paralytic polio. People then started to become sanitized to save themselves from massive exposure of the primary infection. Peoples soon reverted their attention from becoming immune and thats when polio epidemics occurred, with up to 20,000 paralytic cases surfaced. On to the Polio vaccine, when IPV was developed in 1955, the oral polio vaccine then quickly followed it's reveling discovery in 1961. 2,525 cases were only found after vaccinations were discovered in 1960, five years after only 61 cases remained.
- Symptoms of Polio are usually rectified to contain, the fever, flu, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in neck, and a pain in limbs. The flu isn't really personified as being that of a dangerous effect on the human body. But, for as the fatigue and headache afterwords is very strenuous. A blusterous case of vomiting occurs if paralysis is a case, to face, with polio. Stiffness in all of the limbs isn't rare one bit, curved out on a plank, just a straight curve towards a reality...not accepted by the recipient of the virus.
- The treatment that plays along with Polio, isn't as obvious and bled out as the symptoms are. Their is no treatment that exists that can kill the poliovirus, you can't use meds that are pharmaceutical to treat a virus. The only thing that can really be done to treat polio is to provide a fight and a struggle, to put up an effort to try and forget about the disease and do anything that you would do without it. Although, you can use pain killers to help you cope with the after effects of paralysis and such.
nice blog, but it's pretty hard to read you might wanna change you font or make it bigger so others can read.
ReplyDeleteVery descriptive facts. However, like Maur'Shea said, the font is hard to read.
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