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Cowpox

Cowpox is a disease of the skin caused by the Vaccinia virus. The ailment manifests itself in the form of red blisters and is transmitted by touch from cows to humans. The virus that causes cowpox was used to perform the first successful vaccination against another disease. The disease vaccinated against was the deadly smallpox, which is caused by the related variola virus. Therefore the word "vaccination" has the latin root vaca meaning cow.

Cowpox-small.jpg
Source: [1] Larger version here
The bar represents 100 nm.
In 1798 the rural English physician Edward Jenner made a curious observation. His patients who had contracted and recovered from cowpox, a disease similar to but much milder than smallpox, seemed to be immune not only to further cases of cowpox, but also to smallpox. By scratching the fluid from cowpox lesions into the skin of healthy individuals, he was able to immunize those people against smallpox.

Note

This site: http://www.stanford.edu/group/virus/pox/history.html states that the vaccina virus is not the same as cowpox.

Referenced By

List of diseases | List of diseases with short names | List of rare diseases/C | List of rare diseases starting with C | Viral classification | Viral classifications | Virus classification

 

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Cowpox
raine57@insightbb.com - July 30th, 2005
Can humans contract cowpox from holding kittens from shelter that came from a country setting? My daughter started getting red bumps on her chest and neck after holding kittens at a local humane society. The bumps have a white center. Should we go to a doctor right away? Thanks. Sharon Raine
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cowpox".

 

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