Friday, April 27, 2012

What's Really Going on Inside Your Body?


Authors Note: This is a research paper I wrote about different types of viruses and what the causes are and what they are doing to your body. 

There are many types of viruses that are either contagious, or can be caught from an animal or insect. Some viruses or cancers are caused from genetic and environmental factors like Leukemia. For example, measles are contagious while the West Nile can get caught from mosquitoes that have been exposed to birds. But the question is, do we exactly know what is happening inside our body when we are infected?  
To begin with, most people ask, what is a virus? Well, “Viruses are non-living microscopic particles that attack healthy cells within living things. They do not have the characteristics of living things and are not able to metabolize food.  (ThinkQuest)”.  So basically viruses attack healthy cells in living things to make them ill.  The most common way on catching a virus is from being near or having contact with someone that is infected. Sneezing and coughing is the easiest way of spreading germs, and more importantly a virus.
One of the deadliest virus or as others call it cancer, is Leukemia. What happens inside your body when you have Leukemia? DNA of blood cells get ruined, this causes them to grow and change. Usually blood cells die and are replaced with new cells. But in Leukemia, blood cells do not die and occupy space. When the space is taken there is less space for normal cells and you become sick. To sum it up the good cells get crowded out by the bad which causes you to feel very ill.
Scientists don’t exactly know the main causes of Leukemia but they have a couple of thoughts, such as genetic or environmental factors. The main risk factors to getting Leukemia is if you were exposed to large amounts of radiation,  or exposed to certain chemicals at work, such as benzene. If you’ve had some types of chemotherapy to treat another cancer, have Down syndrome or some other genetic problems scientists believe you are prone to getting cancer.
Another kind of deadly sickness is a common disease known as the measles. The measles is so contagious that if you are in any sort of contact with them there is a 90% chance they will get it also. Measles typically begins with a mild to moderate fever, accompanied by other signs and symptoms, such as a cough, runny nose, inflamed eyes and sore throat. Two or three days later, Koplik's spots — a characteristic sign of measles — appear. Then a fever spikes, often as high as 104 or 105 F. At the same time, a red blotchy rash surfaces, usually on the face, along the hairline and behind the ears. This slightly itchy rash rapidly spreads downward to the chest and back and, finally, to the thighs and feet. After about a week, the rash fades in the same sequence that it appeared.
This is how the measles start. The virus lives in the mucus in the nose and throat of an infected child or adult. That child or adult is contagious from four days before the rash appears to four days after. When someone with measles coughs, sneezes or talks, infected droplets spray into the air, where other people can inhale them. The infected droplets may also land on a surface where they remain active and contagious for several hours. Then you can contract the virus by putting your fingers in your mouth or nose after touching the infected surface. Once the virus gets inside the body, it grows in the cells that line the back of the throat and lungs. The infection then spreads throughout the body, including the respiratory system and the skin.
The last type of virus I am going to talk about is an interesting infection called the West Nile. “This virus is carried from infected birds to people by mosquitoes. Symptoms and signs include fever, headache, body aches, skin rash, and swollen lymph glands” (P.).  In the United States, wild birds, especially crows and jays, are the main reservoir of West Nile virus, but the virus is actually spread by certain species of mosquitoes. Some mosquitoes seem to spread the infection mainly among birds, while others are more likely to transmit it to humans, horses and other mammals. Here's how the transmission cycle works: When a mosquito bites a bird infected with the West Nile virus, the virus enters the mosquito's bloodstream and circulates for a few days before settling in the salivary glands. When the infected mosquito bites an animal or a human, the virus then enters the host's bloodstream, where it may cause serious illness.
Lastly, do you want to know how an active virus multiplies and destroys the host cell? Well first off “The virus attaches to a specific host cell, the virus’s hereditary material enters the host cell, the virus’s hereditary material causes the cell to make viral hereditary material and proteins, new viruses form inside of the host cell. New viruses are release” Overall the virus destroys the host cell to make someone become very ill with any sort of virus.
In conclusion, it is important to know what is going on in your body when you are infected with a virus or multiple viruses. Things like how the viruses were caused, what it’s doing to your body, and the types of viruses will only help get rid of your sickness faster. It is an interesting topic to research because now you know what is really going on inside of you and what it takes to get the contagion.
Bibliography
"Measles." 6 July 2010. PubMed Health. 19 April 2012 <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0002536/>.
Nordqvist, Christian. "What Is Leukemia? What Causes Leukemia?" 2009. MNT. 18 April 2012 <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/142595.php>.
P., John. "West Nile Virus." 2011. MedicineNet.com. 20 April 2012 <http://www.medicinenet.com/west_nile_encephalitis/article.htm>.
"ThinkQuest." 1996. Viruses. 17 April 2012 <http://library.thinkquest.org/CR0212089/virus.htm>.

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