Around The World In 7 Diseases

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  • Опубликовано: 11 май 2024
  • Check out the new 50-minute Crash Course on human responses to tuberculosis: • The Deadliest Infectio...
    Have you ever wondered about what stops a disease from going global? Well pack your bags, because we're taking a world tour to visit seven of the most regional diseases out there, from Guinea worm to an Australian form of rabies, to learn just what it is about them that keeps them from wandering off. For some reason, this wasn't a very popular package from the travel agent.
    Hosted by: Savannah Geary (they/them)
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    Sources & Images Sources: drive.google.com/file/d/1AvqU...

Комментарии • 692

  • @domm6812
    @domm6812 Месяц назад +2168

    Biologist here: Bats don't carry these viruses because they're particularly unclean or anything like that. They actually transmit them because they often have exceptional immune systems that can keep them alive even though they're infected, which unfortunately gives more opportunities for a virus to spread.

    • @ericsmith6394
      @ericsmith6394 Месяц назад +35

      I have trouble with this idea. Are you saying other species are 'cleaner' because they die faster when infected? Are bats just better at avoiding symptoms but not infection? It's hard to reconcile an immune system being 'exceptional' while not actually killing pathogens. Or at least not killing them fast enough that a typical individual is safe to be around or preventing endemic infections of the species.

    • @IloveJ2AChungHua
      @IloveJ2AChungHua Месяц назад +171

      ⁠@@ericsmith6394There is a vid on YT that explains the immune system of bats. You should def check it out. It’s pretty cool to know. Part of the reason is apparently how bats don’t “react” to infections as readily as let’s say humans. The lack of immuno-response may sound bad, but it actually inhibits the viruses to cause further harm by not having the body engaging it - kinda like how you can’t lose if you don’t fight the war.
      Just for eg fevers are caused by our bodies trying to fight infections, and though it may help, fever itself can also cause discomfort + if it lasts long enough, your body might get harmed in the process (protein denaturing is just one of the ways things go could wrong).
      So it’s a very tricky biological balance but bats have evolved to be superb in harbouring viruses without them harming them… scary

    • @gregsus4536
      @gregsus4536 Месяц назад

      And SciShow did a video about bats and disease 4 years ago. Just search for "Why Bats Carry Deadly Diseases"

    • @thecarpking9773
      @thecarpking9773 Месяц назад +78

      @@IloveJ2AChungHua It helps being resistant to diseases when you roost in large colonies where disease can spread quickly from individual to individual, I reckon.

    • @BryanLu0
      @BryanLu0 Месяц назад +63

      ​@@ericsmith6394Quite literally, "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger" If the bats don't get sick, then it's not really an infection, is it?

  • @anhedonicauthor
    @anhedonicauthor Месяц назад +159

    CJD is tragic. My girlfriend’s uncle suddenly went blind completely out of the blue one day, and literally 14 days later, he was dead. The day before he died, he was diagnosed with CJD, and passed not even 24 hours later. In that time he developed dementia at such a scary rate, I think it was after a week he no longer recognised my girlfriend (his niece, obviously.) It was completely unexpected, and just as tragic. No one is sure where or when he got it, but I think there were assumptions it was several decades ago, so it was a case of a very long dormancy period.

    • @FoodNerds
      @FoodNerds Месяц назад +18

      I’m sorry about this.

    • @thecervineprincej3986
      @thecervineprincej3986 20 дней назад +1

      I’m so sorry that happened! That is truly sad and terrifying! I hope she is doing alright.

  • @BradGryphonn
    @BradGryphonn Месяц назад +284

    I'm an Aussie, and used to rescue flying foxes (fruit bats) from barbed wire fences etc.
    I never acquired Lyssavirus, even though I received a few scratches and bites over the years. I started wearing gloves after the virus was discovered, and the source was ascertained.

    • @MaternalUnit
      @MaternalUnit Месяц назад +32

      Thank you for taking care of our fellow earthlings!

    • @markchapman6800
      @markchapman6800 Месяц назад +16

      I had no idea that it was related to rabies, a disease that we take some care to keep out of the country.

    • @ajchapeliere
      @ajchapeliere Месяц назад +20

      I follow one of the rescuers who uploads to RUclips (Megabattie), and she's said that estimates put the rate of ABLV carriers at less than 1% of the bat population. So what you're saying tracks. Rabies is one of those things where the consequences of an infection are bad enough that even the minimal risk isn't worth it.
      An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

    • @hungrybirdswildliferehabil209
      @hungrybirdswildliferehabil209 Месяц назад +10

      All wildlife carers now have to get the rabies vaccine before rescuing any bat. It is extremely rare to see a bat with ABLV.

    • @Schutti73
      @Schutti73 Месяц назад +1

      @@ajchapeliereMaybe there are more bats with lyssa because they dont get sick.
      ruclips.net/video/XiBXhCr_Jpw/видео.html
      OT: In Thailand they have a rabis lyssa problem with stray dogs.
      And they fenced a urban area and catched all dogs and checkt them.
      And dependet of the part of the city, 6-16% had rabis
      This german emigrant taks about Rabis in Thailand:
      ruclips.net/video/zvYrTCkFohs/видео.html
      (If you cannot unterstand german language switch the subtitles to your language).

  • @mamadragon2581
    @mamadragon2581 Месяц назад +378

    Poor Savannah was *so* grossed out by the whole Guinea worm thing and I am right there with them.

    • @Challkboard
      @Challkboard Месяц назад +58

      As soon as they were explaining what happens with it, I immediately wanted to crawl out of my skin.

    • @katiemarshall8033
      @katiemarshall8033 Месяц назад +45

      Tbh once I survived the parasitology module in uni, I simply cannot be phased anymore. Parasites are just…yeah

    • @jasontankable
      @jasontankable Месяц назад +45

      I've known about guinea worm since reading about it in my childhood and I'm glad my trauma is reaching new audiences. The worm normally exits via an extremity, but there have been cases where it has exited from the face or even the tongue. Enjoy my active childhood imagination's trauma, folks!

    • @winterwatson6437
      @winterwatson6437 Месяц назад +23

      hi friend! savannah’s pronouns are they/them

    • @mamadragon2581
      @mamadragon2581 Месяц назад +28

      @@winterwatson6437
      I didn't realize that. My apologies to Savannah, then.

  • @Eppimedia
    @Eppimedia Месяц назад +250

    Welp, there goes my plan for a global chain of exotic bat petting zoos. Thanks alot SciShow!

    • @californianabroad2778
      @californianabroad2778 Месяц назад

      😂😂😂

    • @FoodNerds
      @FoodNerds Месяц назад

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @user-xj8wy4uu1q
      @user-xj8wy4uu1q Месяц назад

      Vaccinate the bats and/or isolate them from disease sources

    • @angelikalindenau943
      @angelikalindenau943 Месяц назад

      ❤ keep pushing forward, you're on your way to somewhere awesome!

    • @RikkiestAndTikkiest
      @RikkiestAndTikkiest Месяц назад +2

      It's OK, just sell them off at a wet market in [REDACTED], nothing bad will happen.

  • @spidalack
    @spidalack Месяц назад +586

    "Ebola's bigger, meaner cousin"
    Now there is something to induce nightmares ...

    • @ayhay4686
      @ayhay4686 Месяц назад

      They will issue a "stay home" banner for everyone except if you're dark black because they are scared to be accused of racism. They can deport someone who applied as a student and went through the immigration process legally (including school fees, vaccines, taxes...etc) , legible for citizenship, yet if you were dropped by an anonymous airline or walked through the Mexican border you're welcomed, shown shelter, while your legal papers are being processed. Please, do your future integrity and credibility a favor and just open your borders and stop whining about illegal immigrants. 😅

    • @faytleingod1851
      @faytleingod1851 Месяц назад

      They're s book about that called "the hot zone' it's a hypothetical what if ebola killed it's victims slower and actually spread better into a global pandemic.... But the funny part is the book is classified as non-fiction. Besides the fact it is fantasy.

    • @ThatSoddingGamer
      @ThatSoddingGamer Месяц назад +28

      I literally paused the video to contemplate the notion of 'Ebola, but worse'.

    • @Pfromm007
      @Pfromm007 Месяц назад +14

      Ebola, but worse, sounds like the rage virus

    • @wjm154
      @wjm154 Месяц назад

      @@Pfromm007or the T-Virus 🥲

  • @Xenonmorph__
    @Xenonmorph__ Месяц назад +108

    Reference lab worker here. We get a CJD sample weekly. Typically a rule out, but they have been positive. We double glove and double bag those ones. Stay safe folks.

    • @violet4481
      @violet4481 Месяц назад +1

      do we know how the spread manifests? it's proteins so how do they spread and affect other humans?

    • @skyebeest
      @skyebeest Месяц назад +20

      @@violet4481 We do have the genetic CJD in our family. 2 of my mom's brothers and my mom died from it. So for this one there is a 50% chance of inheriting the bad gene from a parent. In my case I was the "lucky" one amongst my siblings. Decided not to have children so it will stop with me. I am not alowed to be a blood or organ donor.

    • @cyancoyote7366
      @cyancoyote7366 Месяц назад +12

      You could NOT pay me enough to work in a lab (OR NEAR ONE) where CJD or any prion samples might turn up.

    • @rhiannon14982
      @rhiannon14982 Месяц назад +2

      Where are you located? I just commented about how Australia only just changed the blood donation rules so those of us exposed to mad cow can give blood now.

    • @apokailyptic2899
      @apokailyptic2899 Месяц назад

      @@rhiannon14982 No, they changed the rules so that those people who come from the UK can give blood (where the disease originates). People exposed to mad cow disease definitely cannot give blood.

  • @forcedfeedbackclassicgamer5499
    @forcedfeedbackclassicgamer5499 Месяц назад +240

    My dad nearly died from Rocky Mountain Spotted Tick Fever around 35 years ago. He initially spent a week in the hospital. It caused permanent damage to his liver which later caused additional hospitalizations years after the fact.

    • @cameronmoran618
      @cameronmoran618 Месяц назад +3

      Is he no longer able to eat red meat?

    • @michaelmayhem350
      @michaelmayhem350 Месяц назад +5

      If unsure take him to outback steakhouse to verify.

    • @philbert006
      @philbert006 Месяц назад +6

      Mine too. About the same time. He was in the hospital for a month before they figured it out.

    • @kubbybear5458
      @kubbybear5458 Месяц назад +17

      ​@@cameronmoran618 Rocky mountain spotted fever is different than alpha gal (mammal meat allergy--but maybe not all of them...‽), but I kind of now want to look into some sort of correlation b/c of the mention of the liver problems? I spent a lot of last night reading about glycosylation(in relation to alpha-gal) and saw a mention of liver-related enzymes.
      I've been researching this stuff for a personal project and was super excited when this video started off with encephalopathy!

    • @paigeharrison3909
      @paigeharrison3909 12 дней назад

      My brother got Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever when we lived in South Carolina. It was probably about 40 years ago. Apparently he hasn't had any long term problems. He has had some kidney problems, but those seem to run in our family.

  • @DarkMatterZine
    @DarkMatterZine Месяц назад +11

    Australian here. Gotta say, bats are the LEAST of our concerns. They don’t ambush you on the toilet seat, they don’t jump out at you, they don’t… It’s easy to leave bats alone, and they return the favour. I’ve been below a swarm of bats at night. Amazing experience. And, by the amazing dexterous ability of NOT interfering with them in any way and staying on the ground, I had no problems.

  • @urbannanni5864
    @urbannanni5864 Месяц назад +120

    Valley Fever is endemic in the San Joaquin Valley of California. I know several people who were infected and one landmark, Shark Tooth Hill, has been closed for decades.

    • @clarehidalgo
      @clarehidalgo Месяц назад

      Yeah, and baby livestock have to get tested for it using fecal samples EDIT: I remember Danelle from Weed 'em and Reap who has goats in Arizona's runt goat getting it because his immune system wasn't as strong as the other kids

    • @allensmithphotography
      @allensmithphotography Месяц назад +19

      It's endemic across the southwest and is even spreading to the Midwest. But it definitely wasn't helpful to focus only on Arizona as where to get it.

  • @Lolalogo
    @Lolalogo Месяц назад +88

    I use to do BSE testing. Prions diseases are scary stuff!

    • @lordyhgm9266
      @lordyhgm9266 Месяц назад +4

      Unless you’re a yeast cell I guess

    • @hadesKIU
      @hadesKIU Месяц назад

      ​@@lordyhgm9266 What do yeast cells have against Prions? No brain to infect so no threat to worry about?

  • @danielleremer4190
    @danielleremer4190 Месяц назад +150

    I was momentarily distracted but soon as she said “John Green” I immediately knew they were saying something about tuberculosis.

    • @Challkboard
      @Challkboard Месяц назад +22

      The TB lecture was amazing!! I highly recommend!!!

    • @winterwatson6437
      @winterwatson6437 Месяц назад +15

      hi friend! savannah’s pronouns are they/them

    • @flightsnotfeelings5867
      @flightsnotfeelings5867 Месяц назад +10

      I just finished a 3-month long epidemiology project on TB and I watched too many John green videos of him. It was so helpful and I got an A so win-win!

    • @Wingedshadowwolf
      @Wingedshadowwolf Месяц назад +4

      I had seen the thumbnail, but hadn't watched it. Now I will for sure!

    • @angelikalindenau943
      @angelikalindenau943 Месяц назад

      He is a great ambassador

  • @krealyesitisbeta5642
    @krealyesitisbeta5642 Месяц назад +370

    *Now for around the world in 81 diseases.*

  • @benjaminforman8901
    @benjaminforman8901 Месяц назад +68

    "Take a hike, guinea worms!" That seemed heartfelt🤣

    • @noeldill1682
      @noeldill1682 Месяц назад +1

      The Carter Center, founded by President Jimmy Carter, gets much of the credit for this success.

  • @andreahughes1500
    @andreahughes1500 Месяц назад +234

    Do tick checks and tuck pants in socks. Check! Don’t touch bats. Check! Boil your water. Check! Don’t eat British beef. Check! Don’t go out in a dust storm. Check! I feel safer already.😂

    • @WingedAsarath
      @WingedAsarath Месяц назад +18

      Just a heads up, you can safely eat our beef nowadays 😊 Much tighter regulation and now decades without problems means it's perfectly safe. I mean, I live here and we all eat it now just fine!

    • @Elora445
      @Elora445 Месяц назад +7

      @@WingedAsarath
      Documentaries I have watched that doesn't support that. I'm sure it has become better, but I don't trust that it is that good. No British meat for me, thanks.
      You can have CJD for yourselves. :P

    • @hunterBoaz6
      @hunterBoaz6 Месяц назад +4

      Americans can just stick with the foot and mouth from the massive Argentine cow grazing pastures they use for Mcds. Irish beef is all localised and always safe.

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Месяц назад

      Don’t hang round where bats are - Australian Lyssa virus was discovered when infected bats peed on horse feed resulting in the deaths of the race horses and their handlers.

    • @andreahughes1500
      @andreahughes1500 Месяц назад +7

      Actually I am more likely to get CWD from one of the local deer. But they forgot to include that prion disease. The question of my ever consuming British beef is quite academic, given that I live in the midwestern US

  • @DrewNorthup
    @DrewNorthup Месяц назад +151

    Please don't hate on bats, its not their fault and we need them more than they need us.

    • @BionicMilkaholic
      @BionicMilkaholic Месяц назад +34

      Don't hate bats, just love them from a distance.

    • @angelikalindenau943
      @angelikalindenau943 Месяц назад +10

      Yep - you try and eat even half as many midges as they do! 😊

    • @mikesanders8621
      @mikesanders8621 Месяц назад

      Plus it isn't their fault that they're tough enough to survive diseases that would kill other animals. They just happen to live, meaning they can pass stuff on to humans.

  • @TiredMomma
    @TiredMomma Месяц назад +49

    Ticks can be active all year long.
    Last year in February, I got a tick bite. I got sick for 24hrs, but never had any rashes, just bad headaches and nausea. I was lucky because here in Missouri, a tick has killed a state park worker, couple of years ago, which caught a lot of attention in the news. What's scary is we were there the same time she was but none of us got bitten. Thank goodness!

    • @kubbybear5458
      @kubbybear5458 Месяц назад +7

      Ugh, ticks! So many possible diseases! I pulled out an embedded tick on my hand yesterday while on a hike in tn. crossed my fingers
      No season seems safe to not get ticks, esp when the winters don't have as concentrated cold as they used to.

  • @Hannah_Em
    @Hannah_Em Месяц назад +98

    "Fun" fact about variant CJD: the outbreak was largely caused by, what else, crappy UK food safety and animal welfare regulations! The huge BSE outbreak in the 80s and 90s was traced back to the delightful British farming practice of... feeding cows with (amongst other things) ground up dead cows (it's literally called "Meat and Bone Meal", or MBM) to try and improve milk yields. It worked (basically by increasing the amino acid intake of cows)... but caused a huge BSE epidemic in the UK, which is largely how it was localised here and why all the vCJD cases are clustered strongly around the UK. Turns out, if you get _one_ case of BSE, and then casually grind that cow up and feed it to the rest of your cows, then congrats: the rest of your cows all have misfolded proteins (i.e. BSE) now, too! Thankfully feeding ruminants MBM is banned basically worldwide now, although apparently it's still used in monogastric animal feed?
    I still remember as a super young kid growing up in the very late 90s and early 2000s occasionally seeing like,,, troughs of disinfectant that you had to walk through to get to various places, to avoid the spread of "mad cow disease" on your shoes or w/e (EDIT/CORRECTION: it's been pointed out that I was mixing mad cow disease up with the foot and mouth disease outbreak which happened in 2001, my bad! Although tbf I was like... barely more than a toddler at the time lol. thanks to @WingedAsarath for pointing that out!). Once the link was made to feeding cows MBMs, you can imagine how many headlines along the lines of "Soylent Beef" got run in various newspapers :P

    • @kubbybear5458
      @kubbybear5458 Месяц назад +10

      I remember those reports of mad cow!
      Anyway, recently I read that sometimes cjd just has a spontaneous rare occurrence. I read about kuru, a similar disease that has a theory that it started by one of these spontaneous rare cases, and spread amongst a population that had a tradition of funerary cannibalism. After cannibalism was outlawed there, kuru has supposedly died out (in 2005 or 2009).
      Curiously, an EEG can be used to discern kuru from cjd...which makes me wonder about the theory of kuru originating from cjd. A very light search might claim kuru is the first human prion disease.
      Kind of a tangent, but very fascinating to me--i'm working on a personal project around these topics

    • @stellaluna6421
      @stellaluna6421 Месяц назад +14

      From what I've heard, part of the problem involved the government refusing to admit a possible link and publicly denying any possibility that there was a problem with British beef, even after other countries were (correctly) banning import of the beef.

    • @jlzombiecat
      @jlzombiecat Месяц назад +11

      I have never been able to donate blood because I was in England between such and such years as a baby. They were worried it could be lurking in my brain I guess? I recently heard that they changed that rule because it has been so long, and I can apparently donate blood if I want to now.

    • @WingedAsarath
      @WingedAsarath Месяц назад +6

      Were the disinfectant areas not for foot & mouth disease? I grew up here in the same time period and I could have sworn it was for f&m rather than mad cow disease.

    • @Hannah_Em
      @Hannah_Em Месяц назад +7

      @@WingedAsarath Hmm, now you come to mention it I think I might be mixing those up actually, yeah

  • @ichigoangel75
    @ichigoangel75 Месяц назад +20

    "Bat infested cave" feels unfair to the bats, they're just chilling in their home

    • @OhiChicken
      @OhiChicken 10 дней назад +2

      I visited my friends house and their house was INFESTED with humans... they were everywhere and kept touching you 🤢

  • @_rhino1770
    @_rhino1770 Месяц назад +10

    My lab at Emory is doing research in ticks right now where we monitor the prevalence of Rickettsia rickettsii in ticks in Georgia by grinding them up and then testing the tick slurry for the bacterial DNA via PCR!

    • @shadymaru309
      @shadymaru309 9 дней назад

      As a resident of the state, thank you.

  • @savagegardenrox
    @savagegardenrox Месяц назад +13

    I had a chemistry lab partner who had survived Valley Fever. He developed endocarditis. He showed me a news article about himself (his case was notable due to the severity and the fact that he was not in the typical demographics for Valley Fever patients)

  • @Alice_Walker
    @Alice_Walker Месяц назад +47

    I live in Australia and I don't think I ever realised before this video that Lissa virus is similar to rabies. I just knew to stay away from bats 🦇

    • @arthurmartin4616
      @arthurmartin4616 Месяц назад +9

      To be fair though, that one disease is not the only reason to stay clear of bats.

    • @waterunderthebridge7950
      @waterunderthebridge7950 Месяц назад +3

      I mean that’s like saying taxonomically that humans are similar to mammals; Lyssavirus is the genus name while the rabies virus is a species under that

    • @ruth.greening
      @ruth.greening Месяц назад

      My father had an old army trench coat that housed a family of bats, hanging up in his workshop! We never got sick, but maybe they weren't the right variety!

    • @joelgoetze
      @joelgoetze Месяц назад +2

      We have Hendra virus in bats too in Qld, its close to Nipah virus.

    • @ruth.greening
      @ruth.greening Месяц назад

      @@joelgoetze yes, I was thinking of that in another comment, but couldn't remember the name! Thank you. 👍✅

  • @MrTallHead
    @MrTallHead Месяц назад +18

    "Bat-infested caves"? No way, they live there! Those are *human-infested* caves.

  • @gl15col
    @gl15col Месяц назад +18

    My ex got Valley Fever while we lived in Tucson, and he was real, real sick. In the hospital for days, could hardly breathe.

  • @kiwimunster
    @kiwimunster Месяц назад +132

    Once again, New Zealand is left off the map (0:17). 😂😂 We are real, we do exist.

    • @lizichell2
      @lizichell2 Месяц назад +13

      Luckily you don't have all these frightful maladies

    • @kiwimunster
      @kiwimunster Месяц назад +17

      @@lizichell2- no snakes, or large carnivores either. Only native Mammals are Bats!

    • @LesliePajuelo
      @LesliePajuelo Месяц назад +12

      you're thanos snapped back into existance by 6:00

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Месяц назад +1

      @@kiwimunster and humans.

    • @Corqii
      @Corqii Месяц назад +1

      ⁠@@kiwimunstertechnically humans are aswell, i think? considering theyve been in nz for about 700 years? I’m not sure what point somethjng becomes native, but I think humans could be considered native mammals to nz?
      okay so according to google, as long as something ends up somewhere naturally and not due to human intervention they become native, so? not native! but still, māori are native to nz.
      “you are native to the place you were born, and no amount of time living in another place will change that. This is because "indigenous" describes any group of people native to a specific region, and refers to people who lived there before colonists or settlers arrived, defined new borders, and began to occupy the land. Indigenous people are the original inhabitants of a place, and their villages and territories were the first ones to be established in a particular place and were around long before modern cities, states or countries existed.” very cool!

  • @PendragonDaGreat
    @PendragonDaGreat Месяц назад +58

    As a Washingtonian, yes, Valley Fever has been detected in the state, on the warm, dry, eastern side of the state. The parts that are similar in climate to the San Joaquin Valley of California, where the disease is also endemic. Showing imagery of the western part of the state (those bridges are in Tacoma, Washington) is at best ill-informed, and at worst downright misleading.
    Is it a disease we should keep an eye on, including avoiding spreading its habitat through climate change? Yes.
    Is it something to freak out over that Seattle is about to be in danger? No, at least not yet.

    • @allensmithphotography
      @allensmithphotography Месяц назад +3

      Didn't know it was found that far to the north west, but definitely something to watch. From the southwest, I can definitely advise to avoid underground construction zones to avoid exposure.

    • @Leyrann
      @Leyrann Месяц назад +6

      This was my thought as well. Washington state has genuine desert areas that don't look out of place for the typical 'desert states' or even Mexico.

  • @Calpurnia917
    @Calpurnia917 Месяц назад +22

    I contracted Valley Fever after working as an archaeologist in Phoenix. As a paleopathologist , it was fascinating; as patient, not as fun. I’m still dealing with problems related to the disease. Also, Disease and Human Evolution was my favorite class in college, though the parasites section, right before lunch, was difficult to digest.

    • @aellalee4767
      @aellalee4767 Месяц назад +1

      When I saw that part of this episode my first thought was "I'm never taking a job in Arizona."
      I don't do archaeology in the US anyway, but now I'm less tempted.
      Sorry to hear you caught Valley fever. I hope you found some interesting stuff on the site you worked where you got it.

  • @mal2ksc
    @mal2ksc Месяц назад +32

    Marburg may be spread by bats, but it's not exclusive to them. At least one outbreak was carried by monkeys.

  • @corruptedminds5679
    @corruptedminds5679 Месяц назад +19

    My great aunt was one of very few Americans to get mad cows disease after a trip overseas. Because of that me and basically anyone who had prolonged contact with her through her life can never donate blood, just in case.

  • @philbert006
    @philbert006 Месяц назад +10

    My father contracted rocky mountain spotted fever, here in Memphis,TN. He was hospitalized for more than a month before they actually figured it out. Definitely checks out.

  • @shanemcfadden6427
    @shanemcfadden6427 Месяц назад +6

    Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever survivor here, from central Virginia. Got lucky to have been seen by a doctor who had just gone thru a long, tedious diagnosis of another patient with the same problem. It is VERY hard to identify.

    • @kblue905
      @kblue905 Месяц назад +1

      My daughter had it when she was 4. Luckily our ER doc had just returned from a medical mission to rural West Virginia where he had seen several cases.

  • @alansizer2006
    @alansizer2006 Месяц назад +14

    I had an aunt on a farm here in South Australia who died of CJD. It's likely she got it from eating the brain of a sheep that had scrapies (equivalent of BSE).

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Месяц назад

      The British cows were fed animal waste containing ground up sheep carcasses. That’s how they think mad cow disease started.

  • @bethsmith3421
    @bethsmith3421 Месяц назад +15

    I contacted Valley Fever when i lived in Bakersfield, CA. I had flu symptoms for about a week, but a crazy little prolonged symptom or side effect was, I craved ketchup for more than a year. The cravings were crazy, like if there wasn't something on the menu in a restaurant that I would eat ketchup on I would get really emotional. I would liken it to the cravings during pregnancy (other people's disruptions), but I didn't have craving during pregnancy, so I'm assuming it was similar.

    • @teresaellis7062
      @teresaellis7062 Месяц назад +3

      That is a wild symptom/side effect! I wonder what was in ketchup that your brain/body felt it needed.

    • @FutureTechHQ
      @FutureTechHQ Месяц назад

      Wow
      Good for you😐

  • @bethdumont9020
    @bethdumont9020 Месяц назад +5

    Aussie here. We call the Australian Bat Lyssa Virus Hendra Virus.
    First discovered in horses in a Brisbane, QLD suburb called Hendra. Got transferred to a vet called in to work with the horses and his family.

    • @janetmckenzie199
      @janetmckenzie199 3 дня назад

      Lyssa and Hendra are actually 2 different things and both are associated with batts. But Hendra usually affects horses.Hendra virus is related to the Nipah virus and is Hendra henipavirus and is bad but does have survivors. But only 3 of 7 known cases

  • @ku8721
    @ku8721 Месяц назад +12

    "People don't usually bring bats home as souvenirs"
    *Bruce Wayne has entered the chat*

  • @crapstirrer
    @crapstirrer Месяц назад +14

    I think there's a vaccine for the Aussie bat rabies but it's usually only given to wildlife rescue, zoo staff and anyone working with animals.

    • @leemasters3592
      @leemasters3592 Месяц назад +7

      Its cheaper and esier to vaccinate or treat the humans handling the bats than it is to vaccinate the bats themselves, even those in a zoo or similar.

  • @nickim6571
    @nickim6571 Месяц назад +13

    Deer have a form of BSE and it's pretty common among whitetail deer in the US.

    • @-w-.
      @-w-. Месяц назад +9

      You mean chronic wasting disease? That's the most common prion disease that is endangering deer that I know of

    • @nickim6571
      @nickim6571 Месяц назад +6

      @@-w-. yes and a lot of people eat the meat without testing it

    • @kubbybear5458
      @kubbybear5458 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@nickim6571 after my friend gave me venison and offered me more, I looked up the locations to get deer tested in my state (tn) and they're all concentrated in the west which is where the most cwd cases are. So sadly, testing can be inaccessible plus it can average about two weeks to get results back. For hungry people, this isn't feasible. Plus I wonder if the deer processing facilities sterilize (with VERY high temp/incineration being the only way to get rid of these prions) in between the deer carcasses people bring in. Geezowhiz it's a bunch of terrible cascading thoughts. Even if one processes a deer at home, there's the chance of that misfolded protein getting all over
      Anyway, my friend lives in the east, where there is much lower recording of incidence--but I also wonder if it's that ol trick of not knowing=non existence

    • @kubbybear5458
      @kubbybear5458 Месяц назад +2

      It also spreads to cervids other than deer (both free-ranging and captive populations) and there have been cases in other places such as reindeer in Norway and moose in Finland and Sweden and even found in South Korea from deer imported from Canada

    • @S3lkie-Gutz
      @S3lkie-Gutz Месяц назад

      @@kubbybear5458our moose and caribou/reindeer populations in northern canada and alaska are at risk of transmission too. moose and caribou are already scarce farther away from the tree line and struggle to calve because of habitat destruction from fossil fuel production housing and agricultural development and commercial exploitation like poaching and trophy hunting, now add deer overpopulation which makes spread of diseases easier and predator underpopulation and lack of indigenous land protection methods. yeah, welcome to the shitshow.

  • @Jynxedlove
    @Jynxedlove Месяц назад +9

    My bf's mom got RMSF from a tick in NY. After getting lyme twice.

    • @cheriesnakedancer3293
      @cheriesnakedancer3293 Месяц назад +1

      Seems more people need to use insect repellent, if possible, to help keep the ticks away in the 1st place. I spray my skin, my pants legs and my socks. And more if going thru tall grasses.
      And don't forget to thoroughly go thru your hair -- ticks' fav hang-out.

  • @mfaizsyahmi
    @mfaizsyahmi Месяц назад +11

    _pats bat_ "this bad boy can fit so many diseases!"

  • @t-bonejones3576
    @t-bonejones3576 Месяц назад +6

    There have been a couple cases of coccidiosis here in Oyster River in British Columbia, Canada.
    Nowhere near Arizona!

  • @katyowens3119
    @katyowens3119 Месяц назад +13

    Just a quick plug for This Podcast Will Kill You. They’ve done an episode on almost every single one of these diseases.

    • @kubbybear5458
      @kubbybear5458 Месяц назад +1

      I used to listen to that podcast a bunch before 2020! Was recently thinking of looking it up again! I loved it

  • @azblueauthor8081
    @azblueauthor8081 Месяц назад +25

    I lost a beloved dog to Valley Fever after my family took her on a vacation in Arizona. Because it's so isolated of a disease the vets back home had no idea what she'd contracted.

    • @angelikalindenau943
      @angelikalindenau943 Месяц назад

      That's tragic, taking your dog for an adventure surely turned sour.

  • @Bigbadredg14nt
    @Bigbadredg14nt Месяц назад +5

    To be fair to the valley fever, close to half of washington is high altitude desert, so its pretty dry and warm during the summer.

  • @boopbiffsnose
    @boopbiffsnose Месяц назад +2

    I work at a cat clinic in AZ, and valley fever is one of the things we routinely test for as the next step when a patient is losing weight and regular bloodwork comes back normal. It can be anywhere in the body, so the only symptom all valley fever kitties have is weight loss. And it can actually be transmitted from infected animals if it's in the skin, happens to be producing spores at the time, and you get your face too close to a lesion and breathe it in.

  • @GayGHvain87
    @GayGHvain87 Месяц назад +5

    Poor bats get such a bad rap because of their weirdly strong immune system D: but yeah staying away from them is still the smartest move : they get to live another day instead of going extinct, you get to live another day too, and we don't get back to confinement x)

  • @joshgray1410
    @joshgray1410 Месяц назад +5

    Well thanks for the future nightmares about worms.

  • @Corqii
    @Corqii Месяц назад +4

    As someone who was born and lived in arizona for a decent chunk of my life and visit most summers, yeah, don’t drive with your windows rolled down unless you want valley fever or hayfever! Avoid the dust storms, and just generally be smart. Wash your hands.
    I live in texas, water here isn’t entirely safe where I live and we’ve gotten brain eating amoeba warnings! Boil water.

  • @andreagriffiths3512
    @andreagriffiths3512 Месяц назад +4

    Ooooh the TB video was absolutely brilliant! I watched it yesterday and would highly recommend. ❤

  • @_andrewvia
    @_andrewvia Месяц назад +1

    Thank you Savannah. You honestly inhabit the narrative and make it real. Awesome!

  • @redsparks2025
    @redsparks2025 Месяц назад +44

    14:05 Is there anything in Australia that won't kill you. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @BlackIndigenousPosse
      @BlackIndigenousPosse Месяц назад +3

      Every single marsupial.

    • @Respectable_Username
      @Respectable_Username Месяц назад +6

      At least you can't get actual rabies here!

    • @ComaDave
      @ComaDave Месяц назад +8

      Yeah, me.
      Unless I don't get my morning bucket of coffee, then all bets are off. 😀

    • @lyrasiren7940
      @lyrasiren7940 Месяц назад +4

      Literally most things as long as you don’t touch or annoy them

    • @Hurricayne92
      @Hurricayne92 Месяц назад +5

      Well on the up side we dont have any particularly large predators like bears or mountain lions

  • @196cupcake
    @196cupcake Месяц назад +3

    This is really good. It would be cool if you guys did more videos to the effect of "here are some things that could kill you that you might not already know about."

  • @t0mn8r35
    @t0mn8r35 Месяц назад +2

    This was very informative and well presented. I won't be sleeping for a week.

  • @lizkrulderkumar6652
    @lizkrulderkumar6652 Месяц назад +2

    I remember hearing about Valley Fever when attending college in central California around 2012/2013. We were told to use the car air recirculation button to reduce the chances of breathing it when traveling by farms. I’m sure that doesn’t have too much of an impact… but I’m still paranoid about it to this day.😂

  • @pamelapilling6996
    @pamelapilling6996 Месяц назад +2

    Watched John's lecture. It was amazing.

  • @coyote3836
    @coyote3836 Месяц назад +5

    I love how I knew about these from House :3

  • @tjg5619
    @tjg5619 Месяц назад +6

    4:40
    House M.D. viewer: “wait a second this sounds familiar…”

  • @Jessie_Helms
    @Jessie_Helms Месяц назад +2

    I remember being terrified of getting Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever back when I was in Boy Scouts in Alabama.
    Thankfully I never got it, or even met anyone who had it.

  • @KittySnicker
    @KittySnicker Месяц назад +4

    Kentuckian here. That range of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever is way too close for comfort!

  • @jepomer
    @jepomer Месяц назад +5

    I like bats! They were the subject of my graduate studies.
    It's not good to overdue the warnings for any life forms. It causes unnecessary angst among the general public.
    But it is good to respect any life form - especially if you are not familiar with it - this include any life forms that may be from another heavenly body.

  • @JR-mj8ph
    @JR-mj8ph Месяц назад +4

    thanks for the info!! You're awesome!

  • @crjensen77
    @crjensen77 Месяц назад

    Your message came through loud and clear - technologically and logically 👍

  • @lizkrulderkumar6652
    @lizkrulderkumar6652 Месяц назад +1

    Love Savannah’s videos. They do such a great job 🎉

  • @henrydickerson9776
    @henrydickerson9776 Месяц назад +1

    8:30 Nipah was the inspiration for the fictional disease in the movie Contagion. Still one of my favorite movies of all time, even though it was uncannily prescient.

  • @deannastyer7806
    @deannastyer7806 Месяц назад +7

    I was diagnosed with rocky mountain spotted fever at 4 years old. I visited my aunt in Chambersburg Pennsylvania, rode a pony that came from out west, and almost died until a doctor figured it out. The doctor had worked in Colorado, and until the test results came back, no one believed him. I am alive 38 years after a 106 degree fever.

  • @SiKedek
    @SiKedek Месяц назад +2

    Wow - just did a mandated training on Valley Fever here at a transportation authority here in SoCal.

  • @popcorn200213
    @popcorn200213 Месяц назад +1

    I love learning about diseases and medicine and all related things - which is no surprise as I am a first year vet student....so cue my mix of horror/delight as you run through practically all the zoonotic diseases we have talked about between Virology and Microbiology so far. We even touched on Valley Fever- even though it isn't zoonotic.
    I really didn't realize until coming to vet school how many of our most serious diseases are not unique to us humans and how important a unified, One Health, model is for the future of medicine.
    Also I agree. DON'T TOUCH BATS.

  • @nola281
    @nola281 Месяц назад +8

    Leave bats alone. Just leave bats alone.

  • @just_kos99
    @just_kos99 Месяц назад +2

    I just happened to be in London the week the whole "Mad Cow Disease" thing came out. That was in 1996. Knowing that it can have a decades-long incubation period, I wonder if, by now, I would've started showing symptoms. I'm not overly concerned, however, just an interesting "what if?"

  • @savagegardenrox
    @savagegardenrox Месяц назад +4

    I'm vaccinated against rabies specifically so that I the opportunity to work with bats in my capacity as a veterinary nurse ever arises I will be able to take the opportunity. I love bats!

  • @totalwartitan5118
    @totalwartitan5118 Месяц назад +1

    The unnerving bit for me is I've lived in the home range for both Valley Fever and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. I haven't got either, thankfully, but still unnerving.

  • @ashleyrodd8729
    @ashleyrodd8729 Месяц назад +1

    John Green got me onto Crash Course. I kind of fell of when he did. I watched the Consumption doco though, great stuff.

  • @bellesbooks7782
    @bellesbooks7782 Месяц назад

    This host is so engaging! I really like their vocal styling, I hope we see more of 'em!

  • @cloudscovermyflaws
    @cloudscovermyflaws Месяц назад

    As someone who heard about Guinea Worm from what I think was a previous SciShow video from several years ago, my blood went cold when I heard the name again. I definitely looked away from the screen during that.

  • @drbaureis5934
    @drbaureis5934 Месяц назад +2

    Kuru is another fascinating spongiform encephalopathy...caused by cannibalism. That one definitely isn't leaving it's area from what I understand. Man, is it freaky though.

  • @FrankBoston
    @FrankBoston Месяц назад +4

    Bats and ticks and worms oh my!

  • @princechiagozie5079
    @princechiagozie5079 Месяц назад +2

    There are Guinea warms in South Nigeria too

  • @GTaichou
    @GTaichou Месяц назад

    One of the ladies in my knitting group used to live in Arizona. Got valley fever, and was fine after standard treatment. Now she lives with us in Wisconsin, and this year Valley Fever came back in her knee. Had to have surgery to clean out the joint because it wasn't responding to treatment. Was a heck of a time - she had constant swelling and water on the knee.

  • @Error403HRD
    @Error403HRD Месяц назад +1

    My aunt got rocky moutnain spotted fever from her time in the marines and bc of that no one knew what the hell was wrong with her until it was a bit too late to do much. She's still alive but... well, she can't do much on her own.

  • @mickybaus6848
    @mickybaus6848 Месяц назад +1

    Australia also has Ross River Fever and Barmah Forest Virus.

  • @ResortDog
    @ResortDog Месяц назад +1

    Funny. I thought it was Called Valley Fever for the San Joaquin Valley. I got it in the 60s & was told it was in the peat dirt.

  • @stelly_29
    @stelly_29 Месяц назад

    wild, i had rocky mountain spotted tick fever once, got bit behind my ear in my hair and an abscess formed causing pseudo tumor cerebri and i had to have several spinal taps to relieve the pressure in my skull as well a surgery to remove the abscess from my head. i had ehrlichiosis at the time too haha i was a mess. lost most of my peripheral vision because of the high pressures in my head and on my optic nerves, i also have chronic migraines now but i’m being treated. all of that happened from one tiny little tick, they’re no joke! use your bug spray and always ALWAYS check!! loved this video!!

  • @ComaDave
    @ComaDave Месяц назад +3

    Marburg becoming airborne would be an unprecedented catastrophe.

  • @brotherfranciz
    @brotherfranciz Месяц назад +1

    OK, I think this is one of those times where ignorance is bliss.
    I don't need to know about these rare diseases - now I know about some of them (I stopped after Australia, where I live), I will be constantly worrying about catching it!
    I also plan on travelling to the USA in the future... So thanks for putting this worry in my mind... 😖

  • @colbyr7811
    @colbyr7811 Месяц назад +15

    I enjoy the way this presenter presents, she seems like such a sweetheart too.

    • @sabrinashelton1997
      @sabrinashelton1997 Месяц назад +1

      Really?

    • @Challkboard
      @Challkboard Месяц назад +10

      I also really like the way that Host: Savannah (they/them) presents information as well. They are an excellent educator, and have a great sense of humor!

  • @lesleyghostdragon3149
    @lesleyghostdragon3149 Месяц назад +6

    "Cutie Cute Host Horrifies Viewers"
    Alternate video title 🤓

  • @TK199999
    @TK199999 Месяц назад

    Rickettsia pox also known as R Pox, can even show symptoms that at first glance look like Small Pox. Though unlike how it is shown on tv, its actually quite easy for doctors to notice the difference, as long as they put the effort in.

  • @derekmartin2817
    @derekmartin2817 Месяц назад

    Rocky Mountain spotted fever and Lyme disease are frequently diagnosed in my area of western Kentucky.

  • @noillusions8734
    @noillusions8734 22 дня назад

    Ironically, I just saw the documentary about tuberculosis earlier today. It was good!

  • @rasmussenmortuary8771
    @rasmussenmortuary8771 Месяц назад +1

    As a funeral director in Utah I have taken care of a few CJD deaths. I think you are incorrect that it can only come from mad cow disease. Chronic Wasting disease in elk and deer is very high in Utah. And Scrapie in sheep is also a prion disease. It has been shown that these prions can be taken up by plants and when animals eat them then they can get them. If you eat elk or deer with this you can get this as well.

  • @jonathansnyder4075
    @jonathansnyder4075 Месяц назад +15

    Mad cow disease was found in NC last year at a slaughterhouse. The cow came cow came from TN. I’m not sure why nobody is talking more about this. Please do look this up.

    • @turtlefarm8742
      @turtlefarm8742 Месяц назад +1

      Sadly we might all be infected and never now it 😅 let's just hope kids can't get it

    • @andreagriffiths3512
      @andreagriffiths3512 Месяц назад +1

      @@turtlefarm8742kids can get it, sorry to say. It’s just that they won’t likely still be children when symptoms start to show as it can take decades.

  • @laureneliza9770
    @laureneliza9770 9 дней назад

    My mom’s former coworker traveled to Europe with her family and got variant CJD. She died about 2 years after their trip. I had no clue it was so rare since I personally knew someone who died from it….

  • @chrism2964
    @chrism2964 Месяц назад +1

    A family friend died of vCJD. It really was quite horrific, like the worst mix of dementia, parkinsons and ALS all in one rapidly progressing illness. I wouldn't wish it on anyone.

  • @morefine746
    @morefine746 Месяц назад +5

    My best friend's sister was one of those unfortunate souls who had variant CJD. As a result, her family to this day, still cannot donate blood due to being related to someone who had it

  • @kearstinnekenerson6676
    @kearstinnekenerson6676 11 дней назад

    I lived in North Carolina and I was very aware of Rocky Mountain spotted fever because the doctors know to look for that if people got bit by ticks.

  • @notajetplane
    @notajetplane Месяц назад +2

    Now I can't touch wild bats? Can't do anything any more
    My dad, we live in upstate SC, and he had rocky mountain spotted fever as a kid.

  • @Cormacc
    @Cormacc Месяц назад

    Good video. Thank you.

  • @stevie-ray2020
    @stevie-ray2020 Месяц назад +1

    Here in Australia, most bats are also classified as flying-foxes or fruit-bats, although some of the less common smaller species are technically just bats which have little direct contact with humans!
    However a few years ago in the northern states there was an outbreak of Hendra-virus amongst a few people who worked with horses that had contracted the disease! So yes, stay away them!

  • @H8erfisternator
    @H8erfisternator Месяц назад +2

    CJD is spread through neuro surgery in humans as well. Prions will not die through conventional sterile processing methods. Many surgeons rather use disposable instruments instead of risking the prions surviving the sterilization process. The origin of CJD spreading in neuro surgery is a whole other story, but we do know why and how CJD started. Unless what i was taught in the surgical field is hush hush now since large corporations don't want that information spread around. I'm not sure why this channel went with "we don't know" when we most certainly do know. It was a result of pharmaceutical companies, whether it be growth hormones or some sort of antidepressant I can't remember, but it began spreading person to person because of pharmaceuticals. Despite digging I can't find it online, go figure. Would have to go through my extremely old class notes to find the lecture.

  • @empressmarowynn
    @empressmarowynn Месяц назад

    Back in the early 2000's whenever I would fly home from visiting England the customs form always asked if you'd been to a farm or came into contact with cows. I haven't been there in over a decade so I don't know if it still asks that but I always found it a weird question, until I learned about mad cow disease.

  • @Talidischaos
    @Talidischaos Месяц назад

    My mom had valley fever aka the sleeping disease. She forever will have spots in her lungs. Yea she lived in AZ at the time