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Germ theory of disease

The germ theory of disease is the currently accepted scientific theory for many diseases. It states that microorganisms known as pathogens or "germs" can cause disease. These small organisms, too small to be seen without magnification, invade humans, other animals, and other living hosts. Their growth and reproduction within their hosts can cause disease. "Germ" refers to not just a bacterium but to any type of microorganism, such as protists or fungi, or other pathogens that can cause disease, such as viruses, prions, or viroids.[1] Diseases caused by pathogens are called infectious diseases. Even when a pathogen is the principal cause of a disease, environmental and hereditary factors often influence the severity of the disease, and whether a potential host individual becomes infected when exposed to the pathogen. Pathogens are disease-carrying agents that can pass from one individual to another, both in humans and animals. Infectious diseases are caused by biological agents such as pathogenic microorganisms (viruses, bacteria, and fungi) as well as parasites.

Scanning electron microscope image of Vibrio cholerae. This is the bacterium that causes cholera.

Basic forms of germ theory were proposed by Girolamo Fracastoro in 1546, and expanded upon by Marcus von Plenciz in 1762. However, such views were held in disdain in Europe, where Galen's miasma theory remained dominant among scientists and doctors.

By the early 19th century, smallpox vaccination was commonplace in Europe, though doctors were unaware of how it worked or how to extend the principle to other diseases. A transitional period began in the late 1850s with the work of Louis Pasteur. This work was later extended by Robert Koch in the 1880s. By the end of that decade, the miasma theory was struggling to compete with the germ theory of disease. Viruses were initially discovered in the 1890s. Eventually, a "golden era" of bacteriology ensued, during which the germ theory quickly led to the identification of the actual organisms that cause many diseases.[2]

Miasma theory edit

 
A representation by Robert Seymour of the cholera epidemic depicts the spread of the disease in the form of poisonous air.

The miasma theory was the predominant theory of disease transmission before the germ theory took hold towards the end of the 19th century; it is no longer accepted as a correct explanation for disease by the scientific community. It held that diseases such as cholera, chlamydia infection, or the Black Death were caused by a miasma (μίασμα, Ancient Greek: "pollution"), a noxious form of "bad air" emanating from rotting organic matter.[3] Miasma was considered to be a poisonous vapor or mist filled with particles from decomposed matter (miasmata) that was identifiable by its foul smell. The theory posited that diseases were the product of environmental factors such as contaminated water, foul air, and poor hygienic conditions. Such infections, according to the theory, were not passed between individuals but would affect those within a locale that gave rise to such vapors.[4]

Development of germ theory edit

Ancient India edit

Ancient Indian text such as Atharvaveda and Charaka samahita described tiny creatures called Krimi and their harmful effects .[5]

Greece and Rome edit

In Antiquity, the Greek historian Thucydides (c. 460c. 400 BC) was the first person to write, in his account of the plague of Athens, that diseases could spread from an infected person to others.[6][7]

One theory of the spread of contagious diseases that were not spread by direct contact was that they were spread by spore-like "seeds" (Latin: semina) that were present in and dispersible through the air. In his poem, De rerum natura (On the Nature of Things, c. 56 BC), the Roman poet Lucretius (c. 99 BCc. 55 BC) stated that the world contained various "seeds", some of which could sicken a person if they were inhaled or ingested.[8][9]

The Roman statesman Marcus Terentius Varro (116–27 BC) wrote, in his Rerum rusticarum libri III (Three Books on Agriculture, 36 BC): "Precautions must also be taken in the neighborhood of swamps... because there are bred certain minute creatures which cannot be seen by the eyes, which float in the air and enter the body through the mouth and nose and there cause serious diseases."[10]

The Greek physician Galen (AD 129 – c. 200/216) speculated in his On Initial Causes (c. 175 AD that some patients might have "seeds of fever".[8]: 4  In his On the Different Types of Fever (c. 175 AD), Galen speculated that plagues were spread by "certain seeds of plague", which were present in the air.[8]: 6  And in his Epidemics (c. 176–178 AD), Galen explained that patients might relapse during recovery from fever because some "seed of the disease" lurked in their bodies, which would cause a recurrence of the disease if the patients did not follow a physician's therapeutic regimen.[8]: 7 

The Middle Ages edit

A basic form of contagion theory dates back to medicine in the medieval Islamic world, where it was proposed by Persian physician Ibn Sina (known as Avicenna in Europe) in The Canon of Medicine (1025), which later became the most authoritative medical textbook in Europe up until the 16th century. In Book IV of the El-Kanun, Ibn Sina discussed epidemics, outlining the classical miasma theory and attempting to blend it with his own early contagion theory. He mentioned that people can transmit disease to others by breath, noted contagion with tuberculosis, and discussed the transmission of disease through water and dirt.[11]

The concept of invisible contagion was later discussed by several Islamic scholars in the Ayyubid Sultanate who referred to them as najasat ("impure substances"). The fiqh scholar Ibn al-Haj al-Abdari (c. 1250–1336), while discussing Islamic diet and hygiene, gave warnings about how contagion can contaminate water, food, and garments, and could spread through the water supply, and may have implied contagion to be unseen particles.[12]

During the early Middle Ages, Isidore of Seville (c. 560–636) mentioned "plague-bearing seeds" (pestifera semina) in his On the Nature of Things (c. AD 613).[8]: 20  Later in 1345, Tommaso del Garbo (c. 1305–1370) of Bologna, Italy mentioned Galen's "seeds of plague" in his work Commentaria non-parum utilia in libros Galeni (Helpful commentaries on the books of Galen).[8]: 214 

The 16th century Reformer Martin Luther appears to have had some idea of the contagion theory, commenting 'I have survived three plagues and visited several people who had two plague spots which I touched. But it did not hurt me, thank God. Afterwards when I returned home, I took up Margaret' (born 1534), 'who was then a baby, and put my unwashed hands on her face, because I had forgotten'.[13] In 1546, Italian physician Girolamo Fracastoro published De Contagione et Contagiosis Morbis (On Contagion and Contagious Diseases), a set of three books covering the nature of contagious diseases, categorization of major pathogens, and theories on preventing and treating these conditions. Fracastoro blamed "seeds of disease" that propagate through direct contact with an infected host, indirect contact with fomites, or through particles in the air.[14]

The Early Modern Period edit

In 1668, Italian physician Francesco Redi published experimental evidence rejecting spontaneous generation, the theory that living creatures arise from nonliving matter. He observed that maggots only arose from rotting meat that was uncovered. When meat was left in jars covered by gauze, the maggots would instead appear on the gauze's surface, later understood as rotting meat's smell passing through the mesh to attract flies that laid eggs.[15][16]

Microorganisms are said to have been first directly observed in the 1670s by Anton van Leeuwenhoek, an early pioneer in microbiology, considered "the Father of Microbiology". Leeuwenhoek is said to be the first to see and describe bacteria (1674), yeast cells, the teeming life in a drop of water (such as algae), and the circulation of blood corpuscles in capillaries. The word "bacteria" didn't exist yet, so he called these microscopic living organisms "animalcules", meaning "little animals". Those "very little animalcules" he was able to isolate from different sources, such as rainwater, pond and well water, and the human mouth and intestine. Yet German Jesuit priest and scholar Athanasius Kircher may have observed such microorganisms prior to this. One of his books written in 1646 contains a chapter in Latin, which reads in translation "Concerning the wonderful structure of things in nature, investigated by Microscope", stating "who would believe that vinegar and milk abound with an innumerable multitude of worms." Kircher defined the invisible organisms found in decaying bodies, meat, milk, and secretions as "worms." His studies with the microscope led him to the belief, which he was possibly the first to hold, that disease and putrefaction (decay) were caused by the presence of invisible living bodies. In 1646, Kircher (or "Kirchner", as it is often spelled), wrote that "a number of things might be discovered in the blood of fever patients." When Rome was struck by the bubonic plague in 1656, Kircher investigated the blood of plague victims under the microscope. He noted the presence of "little worms" or "animalcules" in the blood and concluded that the disease was caused by microorganisms. He was the first to attribute infectious disease to a microscopic pathogen, inventing the germ theory of disease, which he outlined in his Scrutinium Physico-Medicum (Rome 1658).[17] Kircher's conclusion that disease was caused by microorganisms was correct[citation needed], although it is likely that what he saw under the microscope were in fact red or white blood cells and not the plague agent itself. Kircher also proposed hygienic measures to prevent the spread of disease, such as isolation, quarantine, burning clothes worn by the infected, and wearing facemasks to prevent the inhalation of germs. It was Kircher who first proposed that living beings enter and exist in the blood.

In 1700, physician Nicolas Andry argued that microorganisms he called "worms" were responsible for smallpox and other diseases.[18]

In 1720, Richard Bradley theorised that the plague and "all pestilential distempers" were caused by "poisonous insects", living creatures viewable only with the help of microscopes.[19]

In 1762, the Austrian physician Marcus Antonius von Plenciz (1705–1786) published a book titled Opera medico-physica. It outlined a theory of contagion stating that specific animalcules in the soil and the air were responsible for causing specific diseases. Von Plenciz noted the distinction between diseases which are both epidemic and contagious (like measles and dysentery), and diseases which are contagious but not epidemic (like rabies and leprosy).[20] The book cites Anton van Leeuwenhoek to show how ubiquitous such animalcules are and was unique for describing the presence of germs in ulcerating wounds. Ultimately, the theory espoused by von Plenciz was not accepted by the scientific community.

19th and 20th centuries edit

Agostino Bassi, Italy edit

During the early 19th century, driven by economic concerns over collapsing silk production, Italian entomologist Agostino Bassi researched a silkworm disease known as "muscardine" (type of white bonbon) in French and "calcinaccio" (rubble) or "mal del segno" (bad sign) in Italian, due to the disease causing white fungal spots along the caterpillar. From 1835 to 1836, Bassi published his findings that fungal spores transmitted the disease between individuals. In recommending the rapid removal of diseased caterpillars and disinfection of their surfaces, Bassi outlined methods used in modern preventative healthcare.[21] Italian naturalist Giuseppe Gabriel Balsamo-Crivelli named the causative fungal species after Bassi, currently classified as Beauveria bassiana.[22]

Louis-Daniel Beauperthuy, France edit

In 1838 French specialist in tropical medicine Louis-Daniel Beauperthuy pioneered using microscopy in relation to diseases and independently developed a theory that all infectious diseases were due to parasitic infection with "animalcules" (microorganisms). With the help of his friend M. Adele de Rosseville, he presented his theory in a formal presentation before the French Academy of Sciences in Paris. By 1853, he was convinced that malaria and yellow fever were spread by mosquitos. He even identified the particular group of mosquitos that transmit yellow fever as the "domestic species" of "striped-legged mosquito", which can be recognised as Aedes aegypti, the actual vector. He published his theory in 1854 in the Gaceta Oficial de Cumana ("Official Gazette of Cumana"). His reports were assessed by an official commission, which discarded his mosquito theory.[23]

Ignaz Semmelweis, Austria edit

Ignaz Semmelweis, a Hungarian obstetrician working at the Vienna General Hospital (Allgemeines Krankenhaus) in 1847, noticed the dramatically high maternal mortality from puerperal fever following births assisted by doctors and medical students. However, those attended by midwives were relatively safe. Investigating further, Semmelweis made the connection between puerperal fever and examinations of delivering women by doctors, and further realized that these physicians had usually come directly from autopsies. Asserting that puerperal fever was a contagious disease and that matter from autopsies were implicated in its development, Semmelweis made doctors wash their hands with chlorinated lime water before examining pregnant women. He then documented a sudden reduction in the mortality rate from 18% to 2.2% over a period of a year. Despite this evidence, he and his theories were rejected by most of the contemporary medical establishment.[24]

Gideon Mantell, UK edit

Gideon Mantell, the Sussex doctor more famous for discovering dinosaur fossils, spent time with his microscope, and speculated in his Thoughts on Animalcules (1850) that perhaps "many of the most serious maladies which afflict humanity, are produced by peculiar states of invisible animalcular life".[25]

John Snow, UK edit

British physician John Snow is credited as a founder of modern epidemiology for studying the 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak.[26] Snow criticized the Italian anatomist Giovanni Maria Lancisi for his early 18th century writings that claimed swamp miasma spread malaria, rebutting that bad air from decomposing organisms was not present in all cases. In his 1849 pamphlet On the Mode of Communication of Cholera, Snow proposed that cholera spread through the fecal–oral route, replicating in human lower intestines.[27]

In the book's second edition, published in 1855, Snow theorized that cholera was caused by cells smaller than human epithelial cells, leading to Robert Koch's 1884 confirmation of the bacterial species Vibrio cholerae as the causative agent. In recognizing a biological origin, Snow recommended boiling and filtering water, setting the precedent for modern boil-water advisory directives.[27]

Through a statistical analysis tying cholera cases to specific water pumps associated with the Southwark and Vauxhall Waterworks Company, which supplied sewage-polluted water from the River Thames, Snow showed that areas supplied by this company experienced fourteen times as many deaths as residents using Lambeth Waterworks Company pumps that obtained water from the upriver, cleaner Seething Wells. While Snow received praise for convincing the Board of Guardians of St James's Parish to remove the handles of contaminated pumps, he noted that the outbreak's cases were already declining as scared residents fled the region.[27]

Louis Pasteur, France edit

 
Louis Pasteur's spontaneous generation experiment illustrates that liquid nutrients are spoiled by particles in the air rather than the air itself. These results of these experiments supported the germ theory of disease.

During the mid-19th century, French microbiologist Louis Pasteur showcased that treating the female genital tract with boric acid killed the microorganisms causing postpartum infections while avoiding damage to mucous membranes.[28]

Building on Redi's work, Pasteur disproved spontaneous generation by constructing swan neck flasks containing nutrient agar. Since the flask contents were only fermented when in direct contact with the external environment's air by removing the curved tubing, Pasteur demonstrated that bacteria must travel between sites of infection to colonize environments.[29]

Similar to Bassi, Pasteur extended his research on germ theory by studying pébrine, a disease that causes brown spots on silkworms.[22] While Swiss botanist Carl Nägeli discovered the fungal species Nosema bombycis in 1857, Pasteur applied the findings to recommend improved ventilation and screening of silkworm eggs, an early form of disease surveillance.[29]

Robert Koch, Germany edit

In 1884, German bacteriologist Robert Koch published four criteria for establishing causality between specific microorganisms and diseases, now known as Koch's postulates:[30]

  1. The microorganism must be found in abundance in all organisms with the disease, but should not be found in healthy organisms.
  2. The microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and grown in pure culture.
  3. The cultured microorganism should cause disease when introduced into a healthy organism.
  4. The microorganism must be re-isolated from the inoculated, diseased experimental host and identified as being identical to the original specific causative agent.

During his lifetime, Koch recognized that the postulates were not universally applicable, such as asymptomatic carriers of cholera violating the first postulate. For this same reason, the third postulate specifies "should", rather than "must", because not all host organisms exposed to an infectious agent will acquire the infection, potentially due to differences in prior exposure to the pathogen.[31][32] Furthermore, viruses cannot be grown in pure cultures because they are obligate intracellular parasites, making it impossible to fulfill the second postulate.[33][34] Similarly, pathogenic misfolded proteins, known as prions, only spread by transmitting their structure to other proteins, rather than self-replicating.[35]

While Koch's postulates retain historical importance for emphasizing that correlation does not imply causation, many pathogens are accepted as causative agents of specific diseases without fulfilling all of the criteria.[36] In 1988, American microbiologist Stanley Falkow published a molecular version of Koch's postulates to establish correlation between microbial genes and virulence factors.[37]

Joseph Lister, UK edit

After reading Pasteur's papers on bacterial fermentation, British surgeon Joseph Lister recognized that compound fractures, involving bones breaking through the skin, were more likely to become infected due to exposure to environmental microorganisms. He recognized that carbolic acid could be applied to the site of injury as an effective antiseptic.[38]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 6 April 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  2. ^ Susser, Mervyn; Stein, Zena (August 2009). "10: Germ Theory, Infection, and Bacteriology". Eras in Epidemiology: The Evolution of Ideas. Oxford University Press. pp. 107–122. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195300666.003.0010. ISBN 9780199863754.
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  4. ^ Tsoucalas G, Spengos K, Panayiotakopoulos G, Papaioannou T, Karamanou M (15 February 2018). "Epilepsy, Theories and Treatment Inside Corpus Hippocraticum". Current Pharmaceutical Design. 23 (42): 6369–6372. doi:10.2174/1381612823666171024153144. PMID 29076418.
  5. ^ www.wisdomlib.org (28 October 2023). "5b. Kṛmi (Worms) in the Atharvaveda". www.wisdomlib.org. Retrieved 16 April 2024.
  6. ^ Singer, Charles and Dorothea (1917) "The scientific position of Girolamo Fracastoro [1478?–1553] with especial reference to the source, character and influence of his theory of infection," Annals of Medical History, 1 : 1–34; see p. 14. 16 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Thucydides with Richard Crawley, trans., History of the Peloponnesian War (London, England: J.M. Dent & Sons, Ltd., 1910), Book III, § 51, pp. 131–32. From pp. 131–32: " … there was the awful spectacle of men dying like sheep, through having caught the infection in nursing each other. This caused the greatest mortality. On the one hand, if they were afraid to visit each other, they perished from neglect; indeed many houses were emptied of their inmates for want of a nurse: on the other, if they ventured to do so, death was the consequence."
  8. ^ a b c d e f Nutton V (January 1983). "The seeds of disease: an explanation of contagion and infection from the Greeks to the Renaissance". Medical History. 27 (1): 1–34. doi:10.1017/s0025727300042241. PMC 1139262. PMID 6339840.
  9. ^ Lucretius with Rev. John S. Watson, trans., On the Nature of Things (London, England: Henry G. Bohn, 1851), Book VI, lines 1093–1130, pp. 291–92; see especially p. 292. From p. 292: "This new malady and pest, therefore, either suddenly falls into the water, or penetrates into the very corn, or into other food of men and cattle. Or even, as may be the case, the infection remains suspended in the air itself; and when, as we breathe, we inhale the air mingled with it, we must necessarily absorb those seeds of disease into our body."
  10. ^ Varro MT, Storr-Best L (1912). "XII". Varro on Farming. Vol. Book 1. London, England: G. Bell and Sons, Ltd. p. 9.
  11. ^ Byrne JP (2012). Encyclopedia of the Black Death. ABC-CLIO. p. 29. ISBN 9781598842531.
  12. ^ Reid MH (2013). Law and Piety in Medieval Islam. Cambridge University Press. pp. 106, 114, 189–190. ISBN 9781107067110.
  13. ^ Smith, Preserved, ed. (1979). Table Talk Conversations with Martin Luther. New Canaan, CT: Keats Publishing Inc. p. 212.
  14. ^ Morgan, Ewan (22 January 2021). "The Physician Who Presaged the Germ Theory of Disease Nearly 500 Years Ago". Scientific American. from the original on 18 January 2023. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  15. ^ Redi, Francesco (1668). Esperienze Intorno alla Generazione degl' Insetti [Experiments on the Generation of Insects] (in Italian). Florence, Italy. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.149072. LCCN 18018365. OCLC 9363778. (PDF) from the original on 1 July 2023. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  16. ^ Parke, Emily C. (1 March 2014). "Flies from meat and wasps from trees: Reevaluating Francesco Redi's spontaneous generation experiments". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences. 45: 34–42. doi:10.1016/j.shpsc.2013.12.005. ISSN 1369-8486. PMID 24509515. from the original on 14 April 2019. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  17. ^ "The Life and Work of Athanaseus Kircher, S.J." mjt.org. from the original on 17 April 2016. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  18. ^ "The History of the Germ Theory". The British Medical Journal. 1 (1415): 312. 1888.
  19. ^ Santer M (2009). "Richard Bradley: a unified, living agent theory of the cause of infectious diseases of plants, animals, and humans in the first decades of the 18th century". Perspectives in Biology and Medicine. 52 (4): 566–78. doi:10.1353/pbm.0.0124. PMID 19855125. S2CID 22544615.
  20. ^ Winslow CE (1967). Conquest of Epidemic Disease: A Chapter in the History of Ideas. Hafner Publishing Co Ltd. ISBN 978-0028548807.
  21. ^ Bassi, Agostino (1836). Del Mal del Segno, Calcinaccio o Moscardino : Malattia che Affligge i Bachi da Seta [Bad Sign, Rubble, or Muscardine: Disease that Afflicts Silkworms] (in Italian). Lodi, Lombardy. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.152962. (PDF) from the original on 1 July 2023. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  22. ^ a b Lovett, Brian (6 December 2019). "Sick or Silk: How Silkworms Spun the Germ Theory of Disease". American Society for Microbiology. from the original on 19 January 2023. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  23. ^ Agramonte, A (2001). "The inside history of a great medical discovery. 1915". Military Medicine. 166 (9 Suppl): 68–78. doi:10.1093/milmed/166.suppl_1.68. PMID 11569397.
  24. ^ Carter KC (January 1985). "Ignaz Semmelweis, Carl Mayrhofer, and the rise of germ theory". Medical History. 29 (1): 33–53. doi:10.1017/S0025727300043738. PMC 1139480. PMID 3883083.
  25. ^ From p. 90 of "The invisible world revealed by the microscope or, thoughts on animalcules.", second edition, 1850 (May have appeared in first edition, too. (Revise date in article to 1846, if so.))
  26. ^ Snowise, Neil G. (7 May 2021). "Memorials to John Snow – Pioneer in Anaesthesia and Epidemiology". Journal of Medical Biography. 31 (1). SAGE Publishing: 47–50. doi:10.1177/09677720211013807. ISSN 1758-1087. PMC 9925902. PMID 33960862. S2CID 233985110.
  27. ^ a b c Snow, John (1855). On the Mode of Communication of Cholera (2nd ed.). London: John Churchill. from the original on 6 March 2023. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  28. ^ Pasteur, Louis (3 May 1880). "Extension Of The Germ Theory To The Etiology Of Certain Common Disease". Comptes rendus de l'Académie des Sciences. 90. Translated by H.C. Ernst. French Academy of Sciences: 1033–44. from the original on 22 January 2023. Retrieved 22 January 2023 – via Fordham University Modern History Sourcebook.
  29. ^ a b "The Middle Years 1862–1877". Pasteur Institute. 10 November 2016. from the original on 4 February 2023. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  30. ^ Walker L, Levine H, Jucker M (July 2006). "Koch's postulates and infectious proteins". Acta Neuropathologica. 112 (1): 1–4. doi:10.1007/s00401-006-0072-x. PMC 8544537. PMID 16703338. S2CID 22210933.
  31. ^ Koch R (1884). "Die Aetiologie der Tuberkulose". Mittheilungen aus dem Kaiserlichen Gesundheitsamte. Vol. 2. pp. 1–88.
  32. ^ Koch R (1893). "Über den augenblicklichen Stand der bakteriologischen Choleradiagnose". Zeitschrift für Hygiene und Infektionskrankheiten (in German). 14: 319–33. doi:10.1007/BF02284324. S2CID 9388121. from the original on 28 April 2023. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
  33. ^ Brock TD (1999). Robert Koch: a life in medicine and bacteriology. Washington DC: American Society of Microbiology Press. ISBN 1-55581-143-4.
  34. ^ Evans AS (May 1976). "Causation and disease: the Henle-Koch postulates revisited". The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. 49 (2): 175–195. PMC 2595276. PMID 782050.
  35. ^ Inglis TJ (November 2007). "Principia aetiologica: taking causality beyond Koch's postulates". Journal of Medical Microbiology. 56 (Pt 11): 1419–1422. doi:10.1099/jmm.0.47179-0. PMID 17965339.
  36. ^ Jacomo V, Kelly PJ, Raoult D (January 2002). "Natural history of Bartonella infections (an exception to Koch's postulate)". Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology. 9 (1): 8–18. doi:10.1128/CDLI.9.1.8-18.2002. PMC 119901. PMID 11777823.
  37. ^ Falkow S (1988). (PDF). Reviews of Infectious Diseases. 10 (Suppl 2): S274–S276. doi:10.1093/cid/10.Supplement_2.S274. PMID 3055197. S2CID 13602080. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2019.
  38. ^ Pitt, Dennis; Aubin, Jean-Michel (1 October 2012). "Joseph Lister: Father of Modern Surgery". Canadian Journal of Surgery. 55 (5): E8–E9. doi:10.1503/cjs.007112. PMC 3468637. PMID 22992425. from the original on 22 January 2023. Retrieved 22 January 2023.

External links edit

  • Stephen T. Abedon Supplemental Lecture (98/03/28 update), www.mansfield.ohio-state.edu
  • William C. Campbell The Germ Theory Timeline, germtheorytimeline.info
  • Science's war on infectious diseases, www.creatingtechnology.org

germ, theory, disease, germ, theory, disease, currently, accepted, scientific, theory, many, diseases, states, that, microorganisms, known, pathogens, germs, cause, disease, these, small, organisms, small, seen, without, magnification, invade, humans, other, a. The germ theory of disease is the currently accepted scientific theory for many diseases It states that microorganisms known as pathogens or germs can cause disease These small organisms too small to be seen without magnification invade humans other animals and other living hosts Their growth and reproduction within their hosts can cause disease Germ refers to not just a bacterium but to any type of microorganism such as protists or fungi or other pathogens that can cause disease such as viruses prions or viroids 1 Diseases caused by pathogens are called infectious diseases Even when a pathogen is the principal cause of a disease environmental and hereditary factors often influence the severity of the disease and whether a potential host individual becomes infected when exposed to the pathogen Pathogens are disease carrying agents that can pass from one individual to another both in humans and animals Infectious diseases are caused by biological agents such as pathogenic microorganisms viruses bacteria and fungi as well as parasites Scanning electron microscope image of Vibrio cholerae This is the bacterium that causes cholera Basic forms of germ theory were proposed by Girolamo Fracastoro in 1546 and expanded upon by Marcus von Plenciz in 1762 However such views were held in disdain in Europe where Galen s miasma theory remained dominant among scientists and doctors By the early 19th century smallpox vaccination was commonplace in Europe though doctors were unaware of how it worked or how to extend the principle to other diseases A transitional period began in the late 1850s with the work of Louis Pasteur This work was later extended by Robert Koch in the 1880s By the end of that decade the miasma theory was struggling to compete with the germ theory of disease Viruses were initially discovered in the 1890s Eventually a golden era of bacteriology ensued during which the germ theory quickly led to the identification of the actual organisms that cause many diseases 2 Contents 1 Miasma theory 2 Development of germ theory 2 1 Ancient India 2 2 Greece and Rome 2 3 The Middle Ages 2 4 The Early Modern Period 2 5 19th and 20th centuries 2 5 1 Agostino Bassi Italy 2 5 2 Louis Daniel Beauperthuy France 2 5 3 Ignaz Semmelweis Austria 2 5 4 Gideon Mantell UK 2 5 5 John Snow UK 2 5 6 Louis Pasteur France 2 5 7 Robert Koch Germany 2 5 8 Joseph Lister UK 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksMiasma theory edit nbsp A representation by Robert Seymour of the cholera epidemic depicts the spread of the disease in the form of poisonous air Main article Miasma theory The miasma theory was the predominant theory of disease transmission before the germ theory took hold towards the end of the 19th century it is no longer accepted as a correct explanation for disease by the scientific community It held that diseases such as cholera chlamydia infection or the Black Death were caused by a miasma miasma Ancient Greek pollution a noxious form of bad air emanating from rotting organic matter 3 Miasma was considered to be a poisonous vapor or mist filled with particles from decomposed matter miasmata that was identifiable by its foul smell The theory posited that diseases were the product of environmental factors such as contaminated water foul air and poor hygienic conditions Such infections according to the theory were not passed between individuals but would affect those within a locale that gave rise to such vapors 4 Development of germ theory editAncient India edit Ancient Indian text such as Atharvaveda and Charaka samahita described tiny creatures called Krimi and their harmful effects 5 Greece and Rome edit In Antiquity the Greek historian Thucydides c 460 c 400 BC was the first person to write in his account of the plague of Athens that diseases could spread from an infected person to others 6 7 One theory of the spread of contagious diseases that were not spread by direct contact was that they were spread by spore like seeds Latin semina that were present in and dispersible through the air In his poem De rerum natura On the Nature of Things c 56 BC the Roman poet Lucretius c 99 BC c 55 BC stated that the world contained various seeds some of which could sicken a person if they were inhaled or ingested 8 9 The Roman statesman Marcus Terentius Varro 116 27 BC wrote in his Rerum rusticarum libri III Three Books on Agriculture 36 BC Precautions must also be taken in the neighborhood of swamps because there are bred certain minute creatures which cannot be seen by the eyes which float in the air and enter the body through the mouth and nose and there cause serious diseases 10 The Greek physician Galen AD 129 c 200 216 speculated in his On Initial Causes c 175 AD that some patients might have seeds of fever 8 4 In his On the Different Types of Fever c 175 AD Galen speculated that plagues were spread by certain seeds of plague which were present in the air 8 6 And in his Epidemics c 176 178 AD Galen explained that patients might relapse during recovery from fever because some seed of the disease lurked in their bodies which would cause a recurrence of the disease if the patients did not follow a physician s therapeutic regimen 8 7 The Middle Ages edit A basic form of contagion theory dates back to medicine in the medieval Islamic world where it was proposed by Persian physician Ibn Sina known as Avicenna in Europe in The Canon of Medicine 1025 which later became the most authoritative medical textbook in Europe up until the 16th century In Book IV of the El Kanun Ibn Sina discussed epidemics outlining the classical miasma theory and attempting to blend it with his own early contagion theory He mentioned that people can transmit disease to others by breath noted contagion with tuberculosis and discussed the transmission of disease through water and dirt 11 The concept of invisible contagion was later discussed by several Islamic scholars in the Ayyubid Sultanate who referred to them as najasat impure substances The fiqh scholar Ibn al Haj al Abdari c 1250 1336 while discussing Islamic diet and hygiene gave warnings about how contagion can contaminate water food and garments and could spread through the water supply and may have implied contagion to be unseen particles 12 During the early Middle Ages Isidore of Seville c 560 636 mentioned plague bearing seeds pestifera semina in his On the Nature of Things c AD 613 8 20 Later in 1345 Tommaso del Garbo c 1305 1370 of Bologna Italy mentioned Galen s seeds of plague in his work Commentaria non parum utilia in libros Galeni Helpful commentaries on the books of Galen 8 214 The 16th century Reformer Martin Luther appears to have had some idea of the contagion theory commenting I have survived three plagues and visited several people who had two plague spots which I touched But it did not hurt me thank God Afterwards when I returned home I took up Margaret born 1534 who was then a baby and put my unwashed hands on her face because I had forgotten 13 In 1546 Italian physician Girolamo Fracastoro published De Contagione et Contagiosis Morbis On Contagion and Contagious Diseases a set of three books covering the nature of contagious diseases categorization of major pathogens and theories on preventing and treating these conditions Fracastoro blamed seeds of disease that propagate through direct contact with an infected host indirect contact with fomites or through particles in the air 14 The Early Modern Period edit In 1668 Italian physician Francesco Redi published experimental evidence rejecting spontaneous generation the theory that living creatures arise from nonliving matter He observed that maggots only arose from rotting meat that was uncovered When meat was left in jars covered by gauze the maggots would instead appear on the gauze s surface later understood as rotting meat s smell passing through the mesh to attract flies that laid eggs 15 16 Microorganisms are said to have been first directly observed in the 1670s by Anton van Leeuwenhoek an early pioneer in microbiology considered the Father of Microbiology Leeuwenhoek is said to be the first to see and describe bacteria 1674 yeast cells the teeming life in a drop of water such as algae and the circulation of blood corpuscles in capillaries The word bacteria didn t exist yet so he called these microscopic living organisms animalcules meaning little animals Those very little animalcules he was able to isolate from different sources such as rainwater pond and well water and the human mouth and intestine Yet German Jesuit priest and scholar Athanasius Kircher may have observed such microorganisms prior to this One of his books written in 1646 contains a chapter in Latin which reads in translation Concerning the wonderful structure of things in nature investigated by Microscope stating who would believe that vinegar and milk abound with an innumerable multitude of worms Kircher defined the invisible organisms found in decaying bodies meat milk and secretions as worms His studies with the microscope led him to the belief which he was possibly the first to hold that disease and putrefaction decay were caused by the presence of invisible living bodies In 1646 Kircher or Kirchner as it is often spelled wrote that a number of things might be discovered in the blood of fever patients When Rome was struck by the bubonic plague in 1656 Kircher investigated the blood of plague victims under the microscope He noted the presence of little worms or animalcules in the blood and concluded that the disease was caused by microorganisms He was the first to attribute infectious disease to a microscopic pathogen inventing the germ theory of disease which he outlined in his Scrutinium Physico Medicum Rome 1658 17 Kircher s conclusion that disease was caused by microorganisms was correct citation needed although it is likely that what he saw under the microscope were in fact red or white blood cells and not the plague agent itself Kircher also proposed hygienic measures to prevent the spread of disease such as isolation quarantine burning clothes worn by the infected and wearing facemasks to prevent the inhalation of germs It was Kircher who first proposed that living beings enter and exist in the blood In 1700 physician Nicolas Andry argued that microorganisms he called worms were responsible for smallpox and other diseases 18 In 1720 Richard Bradley theorised that the plague and all pestilential distempers were caused by poisonous insects living creatures viewable only with the help of microscopes 19 In 1762 the Austrian physician Marcus Antonius von Plenciz 1705 1786 published a book titled Opera medico physica It outlined a theory of contagion stating that specific animalcules in the soil and the air were responsible for causing specific diseases Von Plenciz noted the distinction between diseases which are both epidemic and contagious like measles and dysentery and diseases which are contagious but not epidemic like rabies and leprosy 20 The book cites Anton van Leeuwenhoek to show how ubiquitous such animalcules are and was unique for describing the presence of germs in ulcerating wounds Ultimately the theory espoused by von Plenciz was not accepted by the scientific community 19th and 20th centuries edit Main article Germ theory s key 19th century figures Agostino Bassi Italy edit During the early 19th century driven by economic concerns over collapsing silk production Italian entomologist Agostino Bassi researched a silkworm disease known as muscardine type of white bonbon in French and calcinaccio rubble or mal del segno bad sign in Italian due to the disease causing white fungal spots along the caterpillar From 1835 to 1836 Bassi published his findings that fungal spores transmitted the disease between individuals In recommending the rapid removal of diseased caterpillars and disinfection of their surfaces Bassi outlined methods used in modern preventative healthcare 21 Italian naturalist Giuseppe Gabriel Balsamo Crivelli named the causative fungal species after Bassi currently classified as Beauveria bassiana 22 Louis Daniel Beauperthuy France edit In 1838 French specialist in tropical medicine Louis Daniel Beauperthuy pioneered using microscopy in relation to diseases and independently developed a theory that all infectious diseases were due to parasitic infection with animalcules microorganisms With the help of his friend M Adele de Rosseville he presented his theory in a formal presentation before the French Academy of Sciences in Paris By 1853 he was convinced that malaria and yellow fever were spread by mosquitos He even identified the particular group of mosquitos that transmit yellow fever as the domestic species of striped legged mosquito which can be recognised as Aedes aegypti the actual vector He published his theory in 1854 in the Gaceta Oficial de Cumana Official Gazette of Cumana His reports were assessed by an official commission which discarded his mosquito theory 23 Ignaz Semmelweis Austria edit Ignaz Semmelweis a Hungarian obstetrician working at the Vienna General Hospital Allgemeines Krankenhaus in 1847 noticed the dramatically high maternal mortality from puerperal fever following births assisted by doctors and medical students However those attended by midwives were relatively safe Investigating further Semmelweis made the connection between puerperal fever and examinations of delivering women by doctors and further realized that these physicians had usually come directly from autopsies Asserting that puerperal fever was a contagious disease and that matter from autopsies were implicated in its development Semmelweis made doctors wash their hands with chlorinated lime water before examining pregnant women He then documented a sudden reduction in the mortality rate from 18 to 2 2 over a period of a year Despite this evidence he and his theories were rejected by most of the contemporary medical establishment 24 Gideon Mantell UK edit Gideon Mantell the Sussex doctor more famous for discovering dinosaur fossils spent time with his microscope and speculated in his Thoughts on Animalcules 1850 that perhaps many of the most serious maladies which afflict humanity are produced by peculiar states of invisible animalcular life 25 John Snow UK edit Main article 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak British physician John Snow is credited as a founder of modern epidemiology for studying the 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak 26 Snow criticized the Italian anatomist Giovanni Maria Lancisi for his early 18th century writings that claimed swamp miasma spread malaria rebutting that bad air from decomposing organisms was not present in all cases In his 1849 pamphlet On the Mode of Communication of Cholera Snow proposed that cholera spread through the fecal oral route replicating in human lower intestines 27 In the book s second edition published in 1855 Snow theorized that cholera was caused by cells smaller than human epithelial cells leading to Robert Koch s 1884 confirmation of the bacterial species Vibrio cholerae as the causative agent In recognizing a biological origin Snow recommended boiling and filtering water setting the precedent for modern boil water advisory directives 27 Through a statistical analysis tying cholera cases to specific water pumps associated with the Southwark and Vauxhall Waterworks Company which supplied sewage polluted water from the River Thames Snow showed that areas supplied by this company experienced fourteen times as many deaths as residents using Lambeth Waterworks Company pumps that obtained water from the upriver cleaner Seething Wells While Snow received praise for convincing the Board of Guardians of St James s Parish to remove the handles of contaminated pumps he noted that the outbreak s cases were already declining as scared residents fled the region 27 Louis Pasteur France edit nbsp Louis Pasteur s spontaneous generation experiment illustrates that liquid nutrients are spoiled by particles in the air rather than the air itself These results of these experiments supported the germ theory of disease During the mid 19th century French microbiologist Louis Pasteur showcased that treating the female genital tract with boric acid killed the microorganisms causing postpartum infections while avoiding damage to mucous membranes 28 Building on Redi s work Pasteur disproved spontaneous generation by constructing swan neck flasks containing nutrient agar Since the flask contents were only fermented when in direct contact with the external environment s air by removing the curved tubing Pasteur demonstrated that bacteria must travel between sites of infection to colonize environments 29 Similar to Bassi Pasteur extended his research on germ theory by studying pebrine a disease that causes brown spots on silkworms 22 While Swiss botanist Carl Nageli discovered the fungal species Nosema bombycis in 1857 Pasteur applied the findings to recommend improved ventilation and screening of silkworm eggs an early form of disease surveillance 29 Robert Koch Germany edit In 1884 German bacteriologist Robert Koch published four criteria for establishing causality between specific microorganisms and diseases now known as Koch s postulates 30 The microorganism must be found in abundance in all organisms with the disease but should not be found in healthy organisms The microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and grown in pure culture The cultured microorganism should cause disease when introduced into a healthy organism The microorganism must be re isolated from the inoculated diseased experimental host and identified as being identical to the original specific causative agent During his lifetime Koch recognized that the postulates were not universally applicable such as asymptomatic carriers of cholera violating the first postulate For this same reason the third postulate specifies should rather than must because not all host organisms exposed to an infectious agent will acquire the infection potentially due to differences in prior exposure to the pathogen 31 32 Furthermore viruses cannot be grown in pure cultures because they are obligate intracellular parasites making it impossible to fulfill the second postulate 33 34 Similarly pathogenic misfolded proteins known as prions only spread by transmitting their structure to other proteins rather than self replicating 35 While Koch s postulates retain historical importance for emphasizing that correlation does not imply causation many pathogens are accepted as causative agents of specific diseases without fulfilling all of the criteria 36 In 1988 American microbiologist Stanley Falkow published a molecular version of Koch s postulates to establish correlation between microbial genes and virulence factors 37 Joseph Lister UK edit After reading Pasteur s papers on bacterial fermentation British surgeon Joseph Lister recognized that compound fractures involving bones breaking through the skin were more likely to become infected due to exposure to environmental microorganisms He recognized that carbolic acid could be applied to the site of injury as an effective antiseptic 38 See also edit nbsp Biology portal Alexander Fleming Cell theory Epidemiology Germ theory denialism History of emerging infectious diseases Robert Hooke Rudolf Virchow Zymotic diseaseReferences edit Definition of Germ in English from the Oxford dictionary Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 6 April 2016 Retrieved 5 April 2016 Susser Mervyn Stein Zena August 2009 10 Germ Theory Infection and Bacteriology Eras in Epidemiology The Evolution of Ideas Oxford University Press pp 107 122 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780195300666 003 0010 ISBN 9780199863754 Last JM ed 2007 miasma theory A Dictionary of Public Health Westminster College Pennsylvania Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195160901 Tsoucalas G Spengos K Panayiotakopoulos G Papaioannou T Karamanou M 15 February 2018 Epilepsy Theories and Treatment Inside Corpus Hippocraticum Current Pharmaceutical Design 23 42 6369 6372 doi 10 2174 1381612823666171024153144 PMID 29076418 www wisdomlib org 28 October 2023 5b Kṛmi Worms in the Atharvaveda www wisdomlib org Retrieved 16 April 2024 Singer Charles and Dorothea 1917 The scientific position of Girolamo Fracastoro 1478 1553 with especial reference to the source character and influence of his theory of infection Annals of Medical History 1 1 34 see p 14 Archived 16 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine Thucydides with Richard Crawley trans History of the Peloponnesian War London England J M Dent amp Sons Ltd 1910 Book III 51 pp 131 32 From pp 131 32 there was the awful spectacle of men dying like sheep through having caught the infection in nursing each other This caused the greatest mortality On the one hand if they were afraid to visit each other they perished from neglect indeed many houses were emptied of their inmates for want of a nurse on the other if they ventured to do so death was the consequence a b c d e f Nutton V January 1983 The seeds of disease an explanation of contagion and infection from the Greeks to the Renaissance Medical History 27 1 1 34 doi 10 1017 s0025727300042241 PMC 1139262 PMID 6339840 Lucretius with Rev John S Watson trans On the Nature of Things London England Henry G Bohn 1851 Book VI lines 1093 1130 pp 291 92 see especially p 292 From p 292 This new malady and pest therefore either suddenly falls into the water or penetrates into the very corn or into other food of men and cattle Or even as may be the case the infection remains suspended in the air itself and when as we breathe we inhale the air mingled with it we must necessarily absorb those seeds of disease into our body Varro MT Storr Best L 1912 XII Varro on Farming Vol Book 1 London England G Bell and Sons Ltd p 9 Byrne JP 2012 Encyclopedia of the Black Death ABC CLIO p 29 ISBN 9781598842531 Reid MH 2013 Law and Piety in Medieval Islam Cambridge University Press pp 106 114 189 190 ISBN 9781107067110 Smith Preserved ed 1979 Table Talk Conversations with Martin Luther New Canaan CT Keats Publishing Inc p 212 Morgan Ewan 22 January 2021 The Physician Who Presaged the Germ Theory of Disease Nearly 500 Years Ago Scientific American Archived from the original on 18 January 2023 Retrieved 18 January 2023 Redi Francesco 1668 Esperienze Intorno alla Generazione degl Insetti Experiments on the Generation of Insects in Italian Florence Italy doi 10 5962 bhl title 149072 LCCN 18018365 OCLC 9363778 Archived PDF from the original on 1 July 2023 Retrieved 18 January 2023 Parke Emily C 1 March 2014 Flies from meat and wasps from trees Reevaluating Francesco Redi s spontaneous generation experiments Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 45 34 42 doi 10 1016 j shpsc 2013 12 005 ISSN 1369 8486 PMID 24509515 Archived from the original on 14 April 2019 Retrieved 18 January 2023 The Life and Work of Athanaseus Kircher S J mjt org Archived from the original on 17 April 2016 Retrieved 18 April 2016 The History of the Germ Theory The British Medical Journal 1 1415 312 1888 Santer M 2009 Richard Bradley a unified living agent theory of the cause of infectious diseases of plants animals and humans in the first decades of the 18th century Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 52 4 566 78 doi 10 1353 pbm 0 0124 PMID 19855125 S2CID 22544615 Winslow CE 1967 Conquest of Epidemic Disease A Chapter in the History of Ideas Hafner Publishing Co Ltd ISBN 978 0028548807 Bassi Agostino 1836 Del Mal del Segno Calcinaccio o Moscardino Malattia che Affligge i Bachi da Seta Bad Sign Rubble or Muscardine Disease that Afflicts Silkworms in Italian Lodi Lombardy doi 10 5962 bhl title 152962 Archived PDF from the original on 1 July 2023 Retrieved 19 January 2023 a b Lovett Brian 6 December 2019 Sick or Silk How Silkworms Spun the Germ Theory of Disease American Society for Microbiology Archived from the original on 19 January 2023 Retrieved 19 January 2023 Agramonte A 2001 The inside history of a great medical discovery 1915 Military Medicine 166 9 Suppl 68 78 doi 10 1093 milmed 166 suppl 1 68 PMID 11569397 Carter KC January 1985 Ignaz Semmelweis Carl Mayrhofer and the rise of germ theory Medical History 29 1 33 53 doi 10 1017 S0025727300043738 PMC 1139480 PMID 3883083 From p 90 of The invisible world revealed by the microscope or thoughts on animalcules second edition 1850 May have appeared in first edition too Revise date in article to 1846 if so Snowise Neil G 7 May 2021 Memorials to John Snow Pioneer in Anaesthesia and Epidemiology Journal of Medical Biography 31 1 SAGE Publishing 47 50 doi 10 1177 09677720211013807 ISSN 1758 1087 PMC 9925902 PMID 33960862 S2CID 233985110 a b c Snow John 1855 On the Mode of Communication of Cholera 2nd ed London John Churchill Archived from the original on 6 March 2023 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Pasteur Louis 3 May 1880 Extension Of The Germ Theory To The Etiology Of Certain Common Disease Comptes rendus de l Academie des Sciences 90 Translated by H C Ernst French Academy of Sciences 1033 44 Archived from the original on 22 January 2023 Retrieved 22 January 2023 via Fordham University Modern History Sourcebook a b The Middle Years 1862 1877 Pasteur Institute 10 November 2016 Archived from the original on 4 February 2023 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Walker L Levine H Jucker M July 2006 Koch s postulates and infectious proteins Acta Neuropathologica 112 1 1 4 doi 10 1007 s00401 006 0072 x PMC 8544537 PMID 16703338 S2CID 22210933 Koch R 1884 Die Aetiologie der Tuberkulose Mittheilungen aus dem Kaiserlichen Gesundheitsamte Vol 2 pp 1 88 Koch R 1893 Uber den augenblicklichen Stand der bakteriologischen Choleradiagnose Zeitschrift fur Hygiene und Infektionskrankheiten in German 14 319 33 doi 10 1007 BF02284324 S2CID 9388121 Archived from the original on 28 April 2023 Retrieved 2 July 2019 Brock TD 1999 Robert Koch a life in medicine and bacteriology Washington DC American Society of Microbiology Press ISBN 1 55581 143 4 Evans AS May 1976 Causation and disease the Henle Koch postulates revisited The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 49 2 175 195 PMC 2595276 PMID 782050 Inglis TJ November 2007 Principia aetiologica taking causality beyond Koch s postulates Journal of Medical Microbiology 56 Pt 11 1419 1422 doi 10 1099 jmm 0 47179 0 PMID 17965339 Jacomo V Kelly PJ Raoult D January 2002 Natural history of Bartonella infections an exception to Koch s postulate Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology 9 1 8 18 doi 10 1128 CDLI 9 1 8 18 2002 PMC 119901 PMID 11777823 Falkow S 1988 Molecular Koch s postulates applied to microbial pathogenicity PDF Reviews of Infectious Diseases 10 Suppl 2 S274 S276 doi 10 1093 cid 10 Supplement 2 S274 PMID 3055197 S2CID 13602080 Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2019 Pitt Dennis Aubin Jean Michel 1 October 2012 Joseph Lister Father of Modern Surgery Canadian Journal of Surgery 55 5 E8 E9 doi 10 1503 cjs 007112 PMC 3468637 PMID 22992425 Archived from the original on 22 January 2023 Retrieved 22 January 2023 External links editStephen T Abedon Germ Theory of Disease Supplemental Lecture 98 03 28 update www mansfield ohio state edu William C Campbell The Germ Theory Timeline germtheorytimeline info Science s war on infectious diseases www creatingtechnology org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Germ theory of disease amp oldid 1219194389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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