Smallpox From The Past 211
An anonymous reader submits "Earlier this year, librarian Susanne Caro was looking through an 1888 book on United States Civil War medicine and discovered a small envelope labeled 'scabs from vaccination of W.B. Yarrington's children' and signed by Dr. W.D. Kelly, the author of the book. After a bit of research, she realized they might be smallpox scabs used in early live vaccination methods and contacted various officials including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC was excited by the find, because it gives them an untreated specimen from over a century ago, and a chance to look at the disease's evolution. Although the FBI had concerns that the smallpox may have been planted in the book, most of the researchers believe the scabs are too old to be dangerous, and they fear they may not even be able to yield live smallpox."
Interesting (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Interesting (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Interesting (Score:2, Funny)
I am glad I am alive today... (Score:2, Funny)
uhh (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:uhh (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously, I'm glad they consider it a possibility, and hopefully prove it wrong.
Re:uhh (Score:1, Flamebait)
The FBI are psychos with badges though, it's tough to be safe from them.
KFG
Re:uhh (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:uhh (Score:5, Insightful)
a hoax by someone who wanted to create fear
and panic.
As you might recall, after the US was hit with
a bioweapons attack (resulting in numerous
deaths, and the shut down of the U.S. Senate
offices), it become popular for people to
"copy cat" the weapon. Soon, people were
sending packets of white talc power in the
mail with threatening notes, all in hopes of
causing a panic and shutting down a business
for a few days.
As we've gotten used to this sort of ruse,
and developed technologies to detect anthrax
spores, the people trying to spread panic have
gotten more clever.
Consider, for example, how hard it would be to
create panic by sending a note through the mail
claiming that the envelope contained small
pox. Since small pox is tightly controlled,
and highly infectious, it's unlikely a group
(other than a government) has a sample of the
virus. So the hoax would quickly unravel.
A clever person who wanted to create a plausible
story about how a small pox virus came to be
found in a public space might have to work
harder. For example, they could make up a
story about old medical samples, museum equipment,
etc.
And so in this case, it's entirely reasonable
for the FBI to question the origin of this
envelope. No, I don't think they started
out by saying "This was planted by Al Queda."
Instead, they started with a skeptical
line of questions: who had the book? was it
ever check out before? where was it kept?
who had access to this text? is the person
claiming to make the find a real librarian?
etc.
I think in this case, you, my friend, are the
one who jumped to conclusions about the
conduct of the FBI. Indeed, it would seem
that your post exhibits the sort of haste
and rush-to-judgement that you seek to
condemn.
Re:uhh (Score:5, Funny)
a hoax by someone who wanted to create fear
and panic.
In addition to "Fair and Balanced", I believe Fox News has "Fear and Panic" copyrighted. Watch yourself or you could get sued.
Re:uhh (Score:3, Informative)
Re:uhh (Score:2, Insightful)
Never assume anything, stranger things have happened.
And you comment was modded up +5? This place shold be called the Neverdot Ranch for christs sake.
Re:uhh (Score:1, Insightful)
From strength to strength (Score:4, Funny)
Re:From strength to strength (Score:2)
Re:From strength to strength (Score:2)
Re:From strength to strength (Score:4, Interesting)
If we were to upgrade the US government, I'd keep the entire basic framework, of course. The problems we have now are mainly the result of the last few generations gaming the system, perverting small holes in the execution of the system into giant power abuses. If you're really listening, I'll hit a few highlights of my patches.
Proportional voting. Or "instant runoffs" - instead of choosing only one candidate, and valuing the rest equally as "loser", we sort the candidates by preference. The one whose combined total is highest is the one best representing the voters. Lazy voters can just choose their top 2, 3 or 5. When proportional voting is underway, we can open the ballots to anyone meeting a minimum petition requirement for seriousness, like 5% of the registered voters in the voting district.
Immediately drop the electoral college in favor of total popular vote percentage across the country, as it's an implementation artifact from centuries ago, when travel and communication was much cruder. Likewise the single Election Day, giving a floating day off work to anyone claiming it in an election November. Hell, if that isn't enough, let's study the cost/benefits of requiring best 2 out of 3 elections, across a month or two, with all results kept secret until the third was complete. Just to get a meaningful sample into the statistical model of "the will of the people", that we call an election.
While we're at it, set the income of every elected official at the *median* (50/50% of population) salary in their constituency. With a pension at the upper 10% of that constituency. And no other income allowed, with annual audits. Encourage politicians to do it for more than the money, while guaranteeing them financial rewards, and an incentive to retire. With an additional incentive to long-range plan for the incomes of that constituency, to which their income will be directly tied.
Still talking about auditing politicians, make the Office of Special Prosecutor *permanent*, hired/fired by the Supreme Court, with jurisdiction over the other two bodies. Let's give Congress a permanent Judicial Reform committee with Supreme Court oversight. Enough of this crap where President appoints whichever selfserving Attorney General he wants to run the Justice Department, usurping the Judicial Branch. That con should have died with Nixon's Saturday Night massacre, when a succession of AGs resigned rather than supress Watergate, until a compliant Robert Bork sucked up the sleaze (and was almost installed on the Supreme Court for life by Reagan 10 years later).
Getting really "libertarian", let's require every candidate to submit their "promises" in writing, before the election. Every candidate seeking a possibly budget-proposing office would have to submit their budget *before* the election. Let's give Tax Day and Election Day (or Month) the same deadline. With tax forms & guides published in the same volumes as the candidates' proposals and sample ballots, submitted at the same time by citizens. Class action suits against lying politicians would be much easi
Thanks (Score:2)
I just want to say Thanks for the intelligent, articulate, and persevering posts. You rock.
-kgj
Re:Thanks (Score:2)
Re:From strength to strength (Score:2)
Hell no it isn't, it's a design decision.
Think "republic", not "democracy".
Sure, the system could use some tweaking (or more likely, some undoing of previous tweaks), but don't even start until you grasp that fundamental.
Re:From strength to strength (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:From strength to strength (Score:2)
Your disingenous treatment of the gamed political system, dropping the "states rights" buzzword, your recent coining of a "Master-Slave" user
Re:From strength to strength (Score:2)
Instant runoffs sound good when you listen to them, but if you actually work out the numbers in a closely contested election involving more than two parties, you'll find that all kinds of strange situations can come up. It really only works when you have a de-facto two-party system and a minority of one party wants to vote for somebody else in p
Re:From strength to strength (Score:2)
As I noted in another post [slashdot.org], the US republic, as per the classical model, works wi
Re:From strength to strength (Score:2)
Re:From strength to strength (Score:2)
Re:Sad that I agree with you. :( (Score:2)
Re:uhh (Score:2)
Re:uhh (Score:2, Insightful)
So? I'm too lazy to change my prefs every 2 weeks (Score:1, Offtopic)
fear? (Score:3, Interesting)
is this a bad thing?? I'd feel better knowing that no remnants of the virus were able to survive that long.
Re:fear? (Score:2)
Re:Useful discovery for future prevention reasons (Score:2)
And that is a real nightmare virus.
Sorry to ruin your fun, but...
First. Black Death is a bacteria.
Second. Bubonic form of it is nothing exceptially nightmarish in the civilized countries today, since it can easily be treated with antibiotics.
Pneumonic plague is worse, though it can be treated as well. Uber-resistant strain of either would obviously be bad news.
Third. Y. Pestis bacteria doesn't survive outside of a host more than few hou
scabs (Score:5, Funny)
graspee
Re:scabs (Score:1)
Re:scabs (Score:2)
Re:scabs (Score:3, Insightful)
Anthrax in envelopes you didn't expect is one thing, although not easily avoided you can minimize the risks in such situations; but picture terrorists selling things with anthrax in them on sites such as ebay and amazon.com.
They might not be able to target the people they want, but they could reach 1'000's of people and completely ruin the business of selling used things
Re:scabs (Score:5, Funny)
Re:scabs (Score:5, Funny)
Re:scabs (Score:1)
Re:scabs (Score:2, Funny)
It could be worse...
Forget smallpox (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Forget smallpox (Score:2)
It is called "smallpox" to distinguish it from the important one -- the one just called "pox". Otherwise known as syphillis.
In the movie "Dangerous Liaisons" Glenn Close's character is ostracized because she is a heartless troublemaker. In the original book she is stricken with "pox", aka syphillis, which was more virulent in those days, and caused horrible sores, and, eventually, general paralysis of the insane. [mdx.ac.uk]
yes, yes, YES (Score:1)
OK, OK, this is totally just a joke, and I really don't think I should have even posted it. Its a joke, I repeat, A JOKE.
Watch those libraries!! (Score:5, Funny)
Libraries are a breeding ground for terrorists, I tell you.
What Could Happen (Score:5, Funny)
In a freezer? (Score:5, Funny)
the envelope rests in a freezer at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, awaiting a battery of tests.
Yes, after lying in a library book for 115 years I can see why is important that it be frozen now.
It's like a time capsule (Score:5, Funny)
Infectious disease: The gift that keeps on giving.
clever al Qaida (Score:3, Funny)
Yep. With all that Arab oil money they are funded with, al Qaida has invented a time machine, gone back to 1888, and planted smallpox in a book they know some woman in the future will pick up and read.
Re:clever al Qaida (Score:2)
Yuk! (Score:1)
Re:Yuk! (Score:1)
Re:Yuk! (Score:2)
Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Virus represent the border between living and dead matter. I thought that it meant that when the virus came across a host cell it could inject its DNA and multiply and that is why it is living , and when it didn't it just lay dormant i.e. it was dead matter. Wasn't the whole premise of Jurrasic Park [imdb.com]based on this notion ?
But in the article it says ....
If the virus is nothing but the DNA and a protein coating around it, why are the people wanting it to be live ?
Am I missing something ? What am I missing ?
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:2)
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:2)
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:2)
More than one scab - scabii
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:5, Informative)
If the virus is nothing but the DNA and a protein coating around it, why are the people wanting it to be live ?
Am I missing something ? What am I missing ?
They are probably referring to whether or not the DNA information is sufficiently in-tact. If the DNA is too far destroyed, the virus probably won't be able to reproduce itself even after infecting a live cell.
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:2)
Hm
Well, I think that most likely they'd compare these smallpox samples with the frozen ones. You know, the "last" of the smallpox virus, controlled by the governme
"Live" virus (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:2, Informative)
Am I missing something ? What am I missing ?
I think they just mean viable, not really "live", since "live" has a weird meaning for a virus. If they couldn't find live virus samples, then either the virus wasn't there, or it was, but is now "dead", in the sense that it can't work anymore.
True, viruses are just dna and protein, or something like that... Collections of complicated chemicals, bas
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:2, Informative)
Well, I am a Biologist and your answer is right!
The basic unit of life is the cell. Anything subcellular is not considered "alive" by scientific standards.
-DD
Is a virus an independent living organism? (Score:2)
I am wondering if a virus is really a separate entity or is really intrinsically a property of the host. Is a cold virus really just that, or is it a piece of human genetic machinery that has the capability of being shared between humans when one human picks their nose?
The reason I got to wondering is that it seems diseases that stick around have some kind of evolutionary purpose
Re:Is a virus an independent living organism? (Score:2)
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:2)
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:2)
Re:Virus are on Border of living and Dead Matter . (Score:2, Informative)
Am I missing something? What am I missing?
As a card-carrying virologist [northwestern.edu] let me give you a run down on the information you're missing. If you don't consider the type of nucleic acid (RNA or DNA), there are two types of viruses that infect mammalian cells - enveloped and non-enveloped. Enveloped viruses (such as smallpox) have an outer lipid bilayer (the envelope) that is studded with glycopr
WHO Spoke too Soon? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:WHO Spoke too Soon? (Score:2)
I would expect them to have a small supply of every disease causing agent they can get their hands on. It only seems prudent.
They should make an action figure out of her (Score:2)
Misleading statement in article (Score:5, Insightful)
Only the naive believe that live smallpox exists in only two labs in the world. A more accurate statement in the article would have been "only legally allowed in two labs in the world."
There is strong reason to believe that North Korea has the virus. France is also believed to have it. Iraq may have had it up until recently, as it was endemic in the region in the late sixties, and just a few scabs in a refrigerator would have been enough. It used to be common practice for scientists and doctors to keep a bit of smallpox in the fridge when they gathered it from patients. Hence there could be samples, possibly not even labelled or known to the owners, in a number of places in the world.
One reason that the plan to destroy all stocks at the CDC and the official Russian lab was the realization that rogue countries probably had the virus, and hence destroying it would damage future defense attempts.
Furthermore, the USSR and later Russia maintained stockpiles of 20 tons of weaponized smallpox [miis.edu] in the eighties (authorized by Gorbachev) and probably to the present, and loaded it into missile warheads. Furthermore, a number of their scientists have since emigrated to other countries. In 1994 a number visited North Korea for unknown reasons. One former Soviet BW officieal entered into a deal with Iraq to sell 5000 liter fermenters.
And then we have accidental discoveries like these scabs. Smallpox can survive in scabs for a long time, although >100 years is stretching it.
Kubrick's Doomsday Device (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Kubrick's Doomsday Device (Score:3, Interesting)
And as far as what good is it? The population after a nuclear attack is especially vulnerable (reduced resistance due to stress or radiation sickness, medical facilities overflowed, lots of movement to spread the disease).
The Russians could simply have a vast supply of vaccine ready to distribute.
As far as how you dispense the agent, you use a different RV.
There is no doubt that the USSR had a vast bioweapons program.
Re:Kubrick's Doomsday Device (Score:2)
Not for First Strike (Score:2)
Ken Alibek is not 100% reliable (Score:2)
Re:Bioweapons will be used in WWIII (2006-) (Score:5, Funny)
Russia, China and the Arabs will unite. New York will be devastated by two small nuclear devices and while USA isolates itself to deal with the trauma, China invades Asia and Russia pushes into Western Europe.
Could you pin down the dates a little more, old chap? I need to get my planning in order and know when to go hide.
Thanks!
Yes lets all (Score:1)
Re:Yes lets all (Score:2)
At first glance, I thought your post was going to read:
1. Grow a dangerous disease and see how it affects people...
2. ???
3. PROFIT!
Homeland Security Issues Alert (Score:4, Funny)
The FBI needs to get a life if they were at all concerned about this. How embarassing. Morons. Everything is "terrorism" until proven otherwise. My god.
Re:Homeland Security Issues Alert (Score:2)
Re:Homeland Security Issues Alert (Score:2)
As I understand it, their latest attempt at an 'anti terrorism' law makes it an offense to possess information which may be useful to a terrorist.
See? The Brits have banned *all* knowledge.
Beat that Mr.Ridge!!!
Studying undisturbed specimines. (Score:1)
Btw: This 'finding' does seem like a need beginning to a bad horror movie.
Re: Studying undisturbed specimines. (Score:2)
Seems like a strange thing to fear. (Score:2)
Damn! No virus we spent the last century trying to erradicate -- I've pissed myself in fear over the end of this menace
I, For one (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, this was probably a routine chit chat thay have when enybody discovers something like this.
I'm sure they new full well it wasn't a real issue. otherwise it would have been VANS of FBI agents.
Re:I, For one (Score:2)
New?
Captain Obvious strikes again! (Score:5, Funny)
In a related story, the authorities are now scouring libraries coast to coast to find the book entitled, "Where I Am Hiding" by Osama Bin Laden.
Re: Captain Obvious strikes again! (Score:2, Funny)
> In a related story, the authorities are now scouring libraries coast to coast to find the book entitled, "Where I Am Hiding" by Osama Bin Laden.
Easy; he's hiding in Iraq's WMD storage facility.
Re:Captain Obvious strikes again! (Score:2, Funny)
A source close to the FBI stated that they would be questioning Waldo, as "soon as we've found him. He's a slippery sucker, tho, so it may take some time."
Probably not smallpox virus anyway (Score:5, Interesting)
AIAAD (Actually, I am a doctor). In fact, my specialty is Infectious Diseases.
By 1888 vaccination against smallpox using cowpox or vaccinia virus was a common practice, as opposed to "variolization" (inoculation with actual smallpox virus, aka variola virus), since the former was so much safer. This is touched on only briefly in the Washington Post article. So even if there is viable virus in the scab, it may not be smallpox. For reference see the first part of this chapter [nih.gov].
>K
Christmas present (Score:2)
"Doc, what should i do with these scabs?" (Score:2)
Dr: Oh, just put it in a book so 100 years from now someone can find it and get all excited.
Anyone else find this just a tiny bit sick? Saving scabs for later use?
Re:"Doc, what should i do with these scabs?" (Score:2)
Risk Analysis and a question (Score:2)
My question on this issue: why wouldn't PCR allow the DNA for a smallpox virus to be recreated from such a sample(or for that matter from samples dug up from some graveyard someplace)? I'm not that familiar with virology-pointers to the literature would be welcome.
missing category (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Why this may not be for real (sheesh!) (Score:2)
Except of course the source material that happens to be out in the wild killing people.
Re:Memory of smallpox (Score:2)
The quaratine period for smallpox is 17 days [admin.ch], so I assume the relatives or local health officials would leave food on the doorstep for them (brave people!)
Given today that most people in the US don't have relatives living nearby to perform such a service, how many
Re:One more reason to close all the libraries (Score:2)