Top 10 Worst Diseases
Published on November 15, 2007 - 79 Comments
One of the worst ways for the human population to be thinned is to die from disease. Millions of people each year have perished as a result of one of any number of seemingly unstoppable diseases. Throughout history mankind has suffered the crippling and mortal effects of a ravaging disease brought on by any number of target factors ranging from animals to one single human host. Here are but ten, in no particular order, that have decimated humankind since the earliest recordings.
10. The Black Death 75 million Deaths
The Black Death, or The Black Plague, was one of the most deadly pandemics in human history. It probably began in Central Asia and spread to Europe by the late 1340s. The total number of deaths worldwide from the pandemic is estimated at 75 million people; there were an estimated 20 to 30 million deaths in Europe alone. The Black Death is estimated to have killed between one-third and two-thirds of Europe’s population. [Wikipedia]
9. Polio 10,000 Deaths since 1916
Poliomyelitis, often called polio or infantile paralysis, is an acute viral infectious disease spread from person to person, primarily via the fecal-oral route. The term derives from the Greek polio (πολίός), meaning “grey”, myelon (µυελός), “spinal cord”, and -itis, which denotes inflammation. Although roughly 90% of polio infections are asymptomatic, affected individuals can exhibit a range of symptoms if the virus enters the blood stream. In less than 1% of polio cases the virus enters the central nervous system, preferentially infecting and destroying motor neurons, leading to muscle weakness and acute flaccid paralysis. [Wikipedia]
8. Smallpox Native Americans suffer a population drop from 12 Mil. to 235,000
Smallpox (also known by the Latin names Variola or Variola vera) is a contagious disease unique to humans. Smallpox is caused by either of two virus variants named Variola major and Variola minor. The deadlier form, V. major, has a mortality rate of 30–35%, while V. minor causes a milder form of disease called alastrim and kills ~1% of its victims. Long-term side-effects for survivors include the characteristic skin scars. Occasional side effects include blindness due to corneal ulcerations and infertility in male survivors. Smallpox killed an estimated 60 million Europeans, including five reigning European monarchs, in the 18th century alone. Up to 30% of those infected, including 80% of the children under 5 years of age, died from the disease, and one third of the survivors became blind. To this day, smallpox is the only human infectious disease to have been completely eradicated from nature. [Wikipedia]
7. Cholera 12,000 Deaths since 1991
Cholera (or Asiatic cholera or epidemic cholera) is an extreme diarrheal disease caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. Transmission to humans is by ingesting contaminated water or food. The major reservoir for cholera was long assumed to be humans, but some evidence suggests that it is the aquatic environment. In its most severe forms, cholera is one of the most rapidly fatal illnesses known—a healthy person may become hypotensive within an hour of the onset of symptoms and may die within 2-3 hours if no treatment is provided. More commonly, the disease progresses from the first liquid stool to shock in 4-12 hours, with death following in 18 hours to several days without rehydration treatment. [Wikipedia]
6. Ebola 160,000 Deaths since 2000
The Ebola virus first emerged in 1976 in simultaneous outbreaks in Sudan and Zaire. It is known to be a zoonotic virus as it is currently devastating the populations of lowland gorillas in Central Africa. Despite considerable effort by the World Health Organization, no animal reservoir capable of sustaining the virus between outbreaks has been identified. However, it has been hypothesized that the most likely candidate is the fruit bat. Ebola hemorrhagic fever is potentially lethal and encompasses a range of symptoms including fever, vomiting, diarrhea, generalized pain or malaise, and sometimes internal and external bleeding. Mortality rates are generally very high, in the region of 80% - 90%, with the cause of death usually due to hypovolemic shock or organ failure. [Wikipedia]
5. Malaria 2.7 Million Deaths per year-2800 children per day
Malaria is a vector-borne infectious disease caused by protozoan parasites. It is widespread in tropical and subtropical regions, including parts of the Americas, Asia, and Africa. Each year, it causes disease in approximately 515 million people and kills between one and three million, most of them young children in Sub-Saharan Africa. Malaria is commonly associated with poverty, but is also a cause of poverty and a major hindrance to economic development. Malaria is one of the most common infectious diseases and an enormous public-health problem. The disease is caused by protozoan parasites of the genus Plasmodium. The most serious forms of the disease are caused by Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax, but other related species can also infect humans. Although some are under development, no vaccine is currently available for malaria; preventative drugs must be taken continuously to reduce the risk of infection. [Wikipedia]
4. Bubonic Plague 250 Million Europeans Dead (1/3 population)
Bubonic plague is mainly a disease in rodents and fleas (Xenopsylla cheopsis). Infection in a human occurs when a person is bitten by a flea that has been infected by biting a rodent that itself has been infected by the bite of a flea carrying the disease. The bacteria multiply inside the flea, sticking together to form a plug that blocks its stomach and causes it to begin to starve. The flea then voraciously bites a host and continues to feed, even though it can not quell its hunger, and consequently the flea vomits blood tainted with the bacteria back into the bite wound. The bubonic plague bacterium then infects a new victim, and the flea eventually dies from starvation. Any serious outbreak of plague is usually started by other disease outbreaks in rodents, or a rise in the rodent population. [Wikipedia]
3. Spanish Flu Between 1918-19: 50-100 Million dead
The 1918 flu pandemic (commonly referred to as the Spanish flu) was a category 5 influenza pandemic caused by an unusually severe and deadly Influenza A virus strain of subtype H1N1. Many of its victims were healthy young adults, in contrast to most influenza outbreaks which predominantly affect juvenile, elderly, or otherwise weakened patients. The Spanish flu pandemic lasted from 1918 to 1919, spreading even to the Arctic and remote Pacific islands. While older estimates put the number of killed at 40–50 million people, current estimates are that 50 million to 100 million people worldwide died, possibly more than that taken by the Black Death. This extraordinary toll resulted from the extremely high infection rate of up to 50% and the extreme severity of the symptoms, suspected to be caused by cytokine storms. Between 2 and 20% of those infected by Spanish flu died, as opposed to the normal flu epidemic mortality rate of 0.1%. In some remote Inuit villages, mortality rates of nearly 100% were recorded. [Wikipedia]
2. Influenza 36,000 Deaths per year
Influenza, commonly known as flu, is an infectious disease of birds and mammals caused by RNA viruses of the family Orthomyxoviridae (the influenza viruses). In humans, common symptoms of influenza infection are fever, sore throat, muscle pains, severe headache, coughing, weakness and general discomfort. In more serious cases, influenza causes pneumonia, which can be fatal, particularly in young children and the elderly. Sometimes confused with the common cold, influenza is a much more severe disease and is caused by a different type of virus. Although nausea and vomiting can be produced, especially in children, these symptoms are more characteristic of the unrelated gastroenteritis, which is sometimes called “stomach flu” or “24-hour flu.” Typically, influenza is transmitted from infected mammals through the air by coughs or sneezes, creating aerosols containing the virus, and from infected birds through their droppings. Influenza can also be transmitted by saliva, nasal secretions, feces and blood. Infections also occur through contact with these body fluids or with contaminated surfaces. [Wikipedia]
1. AIDS 25 Million since 1981
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS or Aids) is a collection of symptoms and infections resulting from the specific damage to the immune system caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in humans, and similar viruses in other species (SIV, FIV, etc.). The late stage of the condition leaves individuals susceptible to opportunistic infections and tumors. Although treatments for AIDS and HIV exist to decelerate the virus’ progression, there is currently no known cure. HIV, et al., are transmitted through direct contact of a mucous membrane or the bloodstream with a bodily fluid containing HIV, such as blood, semen, vaginal fluid, preseminal fluid, and breast milk. This transmission can come in the form of anal, vaginal or oral sex, blood transfusion, contaminated hypodermic needles, exchange between mother and baby during pregnancy, childbirth, or breastfeeding, or other exposure to one of the above bodily fluids. Most researchers believe that HIV originated in sub-Saharan Africa during the twentieth century; it is now a pandemic, with an estimated 38.6 million people now living with the disease worldwide. [Wikipedia]
This article is licensed under the GFDL. It uses material from the Wikipedia articles cited above.
Contributor: StewWriter
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1. dangorironhide - November 15th, 2007 at 5:59 am
Aren’t Spanish Flu and Influenza the same disease?
2. TulaneMED - November 15th, 2007 at 6:13 am
They are. Just a few small genome changes difference.
Smallpox needs to be #1. Unique combination of deadliness, infectiousness, and virulence. Won’t kill ya fast enough to dampen its own transmission. Its vaccine has too high of a complications(death) rate to give to everybody. And it is waiting to come back.
Aids will seem like a Sunday afternoon, even with the projected deaths(to 2050) in Asia, Africa, and Russia.
Smallpox would do twice that in a year.
Ebola? Give me a break, shoulda put rhinovirus, coronavirus, and adenovirus before that. They all cause the common cold, and kill more people each year than that Hollywood disease.
3. StewWriter - November 15th, 2007 at 6:22 am
TULANEMED: Thanks for the criticism! I thrive on it! Also, in the header, it says “here are BUT TEN. IN NO PARTICULAR ORDER” so I wasn’t going for the ones that few people have even heard of. And I bet those with Ebola don’t consider it ‘Hollywood’. Anyway, I tried to construct a list that was a bit different from the usual, so I hope you can get past what’s not there and enjoy what is. Maybe enjoy is the wrong word. Sorry if that reads harshly, I’m exhausted from a piss poor night of sleep.
4. Oscar - November 15th, 2007 at 6:24 am
I’d always thought that the Black Death was bubonic plague. You learn something new every day…
5. dangorironhide - November 15th, 2007 at 6:24 am
TulaneMED: Hmm, when you think about it, smallpox should be number one. Never mind Native Americans, how about the Aztec/Inca people, the Australian Aborigines, the Pacific Islanders?
I’m betting theres gonna be some sort of industrial accident at a lab, which is going to release smallpox into the world again.
AIDS may be nasty, but its pretty hard to spread, I think it dies in a second in air or something?
EDIT: I didnt notice the ‘in no particular order’ part. Sorry StewWriter
6. Juggz - November 15th, 2007 at 7:03 am
Oscar: The Black death was a pandemic caused by the bubonic plague. I
I dont really think listing them as seperate diseases is an accurate way to describe them.
7. roxy - November 15th, 2007 at 7:23 am
great list, stewwriter! but i thought the Black Death was actually a conbination of different disease, all occuring at the same time. isn’t it likely that the unsanitary living conditions of the middle ages, coupled, with famine, horribly hard winters, and poor food quality all contributed to the pandemic? at that time in history, oceanic travel was becomeing more common, and it was easier for little microbes to be practically hand-delivered to new hosts whose immune systems never had a chance.
8. StewWriter - November 15th, 2007 at 7:29 am
Juggz: Different Pandemic all together. That was why I separated the two. But thanks for making me check my work! :^)
roxy: Thanks! And yes, it certainly is. Those factors were huge contributors!
9. Eric - November 15th, 2007 at 7:54 am
the black death is actually just a general term for a series of outbreaks of 3 different plauges, the first was the bubonic plauge, but the most deadly was the septicemic plauge it was air born and could kill within hours of ctching it. the term black death refers to black patches of dead tissue that people got on ther bodies which all three plauges gave you, probably because they were all from the same original strain
10. Yarr - November 15th, 2007 at 7:54 am
I realize that the list is all about infectious diseases, but really, wouldn’t the #1 fatal human disease be cancer?
It comes in many forms, there is no true cure, no vaccine, and after hundreds of billions of dollars and research hours, we can still only guess as to what causes it and how to prevent it.
AIDS sucks, but a person can take steps to avoid it and won’t randomly develop it…
11. Vicky - November 15th, 2007 at 8:02 am
I know that very few people get leprosy, but I think it just might be one of the worst ways to go out. There are a lot of really rare horror diseases that are ten times worse than whats on here.
12. Juggz - November 15th, 2007 at 8:10 am
Stew: maybe you should check your work again, again! Even under the link from bubonic plague under secondo utbreak it lists “Black Death” There may have been slight differences but its widely believed that they were cause but the same strain of buboes. So to me that makes them one in the same and not worthy of being list seperately.
13. Jenna - November 15th, 2007 at 8:25 am
If you play the video on number 10, the facts stated in the video, and the ones listed in the description below, do not match at all. Which is correct?
14. dangorironhide - November 15th, 2007 at 8:26 am
StewWriter: It seems that instead of writing a list of 10 disease, you’ve written a list of 8 diseases, and 2 large outbreaks of the same diseases.
15. Kelsi - November 15th, 2007 at 8:33 am
Ooo, good list. I think ebola would be absoultely the worst thing to die from, ever. Bleeding out through your pores? No thanks. I got the flu last year, and let me tell you, it was only mind but it was three days of HELL. I can’t imagine having something worse. Diseases are so scary. No avian flu on here then? Not very many deaths I suppose (I don’t really know, no research going into this comment) but it’s definately getting a lot of press.
16. Cyn - November 15th, 2007 at 8:44 am
not to worry Stew…i think its a good list. bit disconcerting but a good list. just consider the criticisms constructive.
thank you for submitting it. only those who’ve submitted a list can appreciate the full glory and agony of doing so. 
17. Fallenangel - November 15th, 2007 at 9:03 am
After working in a nursing home one of the diseases that scares me and makes me hurt to watch is Congestive Heart Failure (CHF). There’s nothing harder than watching someone slowly suffocate over a period of time. That was hard. More of a personal note than anything else, other than that good list, if not a litte nerve wracking for a hypochondriac. :)(:
18. bucslim - November 15th, 2007 at 10:56 am
Cancer?
19. Matt - November 15th, 2007 at 12:31 pm
bucslim: no, I am a Gemini
20. Martin L - November 15th, 2007 at 12:33 pm
Great list, Stew! I think I would have aided the beastie that carried off Jim Henson, that superstrep. TulaneMED, any thoughts on that particular pathogen? Did read an article a few years ago in the New Yorker saying there’s only a very small known stockpile of smallpox in laboratory containment. The problem is the smallpox elsewhere, say in the former Soviet Union, that we DON’T know about. And as TulaneMED says, smallpox is definitely the guy riding the Pestilence horse, well above AIDS or avian flu or anything else.
When I worked at he American Red Cross in the early 90s, we were told as part of training that the AIDS virus only lives a max of 12 seconds in the air, and can be killed by a mild bleach solution, sunlight, or heat sterilization. Really, to contract it you have to be either an unlucky baby, blood or blood products recipient, or someone who has not once paid attention to over two decades worth of clearly stated precautions, or is illiterate. It doesn’t spread that easily. Not like smallpox — or for that matter tuberculosis, which has made a huge resurgence thanks to AIDS in the last couple of decades. (TB could have been another one for the list.)
21. Angelina - November 15th, 2007 at 1:09 pm
Great list! I stumbled upon this website while on IMDB.com one day at work. I have been hooked ever since!
22. 20Fan20 - November 15th, 2007 at 9:20 pm
I wonder how long until antibiotic resistant staph infections make the list.
Still amazes me how many times I have been told to take antibiotics when I didn’t need them. Most docs over prescribe these to prevent lawsuits. Granted I would too if I were them.
23. Sheyhey - November 15th, 2007 at 10:53 pm
I didnt read all these but arent the black death and the bubonic plague the same thing?
24. Yarr - November 15th, 2007 at 11:00 pm
Have you guys seen that video going around the internet the last couple of days with the guy with the rare form of leprosy that looks like he has tree roots growing out of his hands?
Weird.
25. Lasse - November 15th, 2007 at 11:20 pm
I would consider sea sickness one of the worst diseases of all.
26. dvhann - November 15th, 2007 at 11:56 pm
I grew up with a guy named Sam who died of AIDS a few months ago.. I met him when i was 5 and he was about 8 or 9 at the time, and he lived a few houses down from mine. He and i were best friends until i reached about..grade 10 i think, and it was the year after he graduated.
He told me when i was in about grade 8 that he was gay, which i suppose made alot of sense.. and i supported him all the way, and nothing about this news made me think different.
And when i was in grade 10 he had stopped talking to me, and i blamed it on university and his boyfriend and such..it hurt not being around with him, but i had faced the fact that some people move on. After finding out that he had moved out of his house down the street i knew i probably wouldn’t see him for a long time.
I graduated from High school a few months ago, and it was a month before graduation that i heard from a few of my neighbours that Sam had died. I was dumbstruck.
It was only about two months ago that i found out that he had died of AIDS..and that he had contracted HIV around the same time that I had gone into high school. I was completely destroyed by the fact that Sam didn’t tell me about this..and now he’s gone and sometimes i wish i was still 5 years old.
But now i have faced it, and i have accepted it. It bothers me that i never got to say goodbye to him, to comfort him in his last hours, but i suppose that’s life. I’m glad he’s not in pain anymore.
I hate AIDS
27. jfrater - November 16th, 2007 at 3:57 am
Yarr: no - it sounds revolting
dvhann: thanks for sharing - that is a tragic story indeed.
28. jfrater - November 16th, 2007 at 4:02 am
SheyHey: The black death was not just bubonic plague, it was also pneumonic plague. Some scientists in modern days are also disputing the the fact that the bubonic plague was even a part of the black death.
29. drew - November 17th, 2007 at 2:39 am
black death IS the bubonic plague
30. jfrater - November 17th, 2007 at 3:24 am
drew: see my comment number 28
31. bob - November 17th, 2007 at 3:26 pm
Black Death is considered to include primarily Bubonic Plague (although it didn’t kill as readily as you might think–it had a relatively high recovery rate of about 75%, considering the lack of medical professionals and the unsanitary condidtions). It also included the pneumonic plague which infected the lungs as well as the other stuff that the bubonic plague infected. It had a much lower survival rate, something around 25% I think. The mot deadly part of the Black Death was the septicemic plague, which was basically bubonic plague plus pneumonic plague and it was EXTREMELY contagious and EXTREMELY deadly, with a survival rate of about 0%. This septicemic plague could infect you on your way to work in the morning, then you would be dead before dinner that very day. Luckily, it was so deadly that it didn’t give the infected person much time to pass it on to other people, so septicemic plague didn’t infect all that many people.
32. 2overpar - November 17th, 2007 at 5:32 pm
check out proteus syndrome, neurofibromatosis and scleroderma
33. bhoges - November 26th, 2007 at 2:06 pm
Nice list, but you should’ve included Rabies Encephalitis; Once in the bloodstream it has the highest mortality rate of any known disease (only one person in human history - Jeanna Giese - is believed to have survived an infection), and the symptoms are particularly nasty: severe muscular spasms, agonising thirst arising from hydrophobia, frothing of the mouth, insanity, paralysis, and then mercifully, death.
34. SnowKid32 - November 28th, 2007 at 8:45 pm
Ugh, #4=#10?
WTF?
35. Jake - December 3rd, 2007 at 12:52 pm
the Spanish Flu or la Grippe is the worst disease ever.killing over 25million people in 25 weeks it was very serious.It had black death/bubonic/septicemic plague like symptoms.like buboes,hemorrages,black/blue skin tinges and suffocating on blood.[also in rare cases there was bleeding from ears]
36. Jake - December 3rd, 2007 at 12:53 pm
the spanish flu is the worst disease ever, even worse than smallpox
37. rebelaessedai - December 6th, 2007 at 10:36 pm
This should be like top pandemics/ epidemics. The worst disease I’ve ever encountered is Creutzfeldt-Jakob, also known as mad cow disease. Once onset begins, you have less than six months to live. I think the max time with full life support is about 8 months.
38. Tanner - December 16th, 2007 at 1:11 pm
The thing is that the list didn’t clarify how these disease are bad. If they were to top ten most painful diseases, top ten worst in relation to poulation that each disease ect. Perhaps the author of said list could clarify the list type to allow the dicsussion to be a bit more spesific.
39. suzi - December 16th, 2007 at 4:56 pm
How can ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease not be on this list? Seriously, this is so bad more of Dr. Kevorkian’s patients have had this than anything else.
Think about it: your mind is perfectly fine, while your body slowly becomes paralysed. Eventually someone has to do EVERYTHING for you. Unlike a paraplegic, you do feel your body, you hurt, you itch, you just can’t do anything about it.
And, when the muscles you need to breathe become paralysed, you suffocate..slowly.
If you or someone you know has this, I’m not trying to be a real downer, there are things your neuralagist can do to make you more comfortable, and technoloy to help you at least communicate when you can’t talk or move, but I just hink any discussion of “worst” diseases should have this on it!
40. suzi - December 20th, 2007 at 1:26 am
So I checked and noticed that your top 10 are all communicative diseases. Is that why? In that case, the title should say so.
41. sdggrant - December 20th, 2007 at 1:36 am
Suzi, I think the reason all of the diseases listed are communicative is because their very nature makes them more deadly. I won’t argue with you, ALS is a HORRIBLE thing to have, but did it wipe out 1/3 of the worlds population like the bubonic plague? I think the list was looking at the broader picture, and ALS hasnt even scratched the surface of the amount of deaths caused by the diseases listed above.
42. suzi - December 20th, 2007 at 1:42 am
I thought about the number of deaths. But if you look at the statistics above, Polio, Cholera, and #2 influenza do not show that many deaths either.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, sdggrant.
Maybe we need another list that would include diseases like Canceer, ALS, Parkinson’s, ect?
43. dkroll - December 27th, 2007 at 1:17 am
A friend told me this but didn’t the soviet union invent a disease while expiramenting with virruses? Its called K-52 I think… 1 symptom is your eyes bursting… Greusome isn’t it!
44. jfrater - December 27th, 2007 at 5:44 am
dkroll: a quick scan of the net doesn’t give any pertinent results for a k-52 disease - if you have the name right then I am guessing someone is not telling you the truth.
45. cheezeburger - January 1st, 2008 at 10:17 pm
Are all these diseases caused by virus or bacteria?
46. Azmerelda - January 8th, 2008 at 8:35 pm
Jfrater:PLEASE READ
Okay this list is of the top 10 worst, but it seems to be the top 10 most fatal instead. Because wouldnt Chlamydia, Syphillis and gonohrea be on there considering the fact that you suffer from them the most were as the others you die from with in a short while besides polio ands AIDS. Polio is a crippling disease small pox you dont get crippled from you just suffer for a few months and then you die. Would you rather suffer several years with a disease or get out of your misery which is worse? If i knew that i was gonna die then from the disease then i would rather get it over with instead of suffering if there was no cure or if i wouldnt be able to completely recover. How is influenza one of the worst yeah lots of people died but they didnt suffer that long. I completely agree that AIDS is the worst considering that it killed so many people and its a lot easy to get than people assume it eats you insides and kills off you white blood cells to make them kill you off(one of my friends had it. I like the list but I dont think that its right.
47. avi - January 24th, 2008 at 3:56 am
AIDS is not that deadly anymore.
48. avi - January 28th, 2008 at 5:34 am
8 and 9 are now extinct
49. avi - January 28th, 2008 at 5:35 am
deadliest disease is influenza now. get your facts right
50. Johnson - January 28th, 2008 at 1:02 pm
The malaria disease is so great a scourge i only pray that someday some medical research pros will come up with one dose that can fully destroy the parasite once and for all.
I agree there is no disease that is a party but when you have a malaria parasite dwelling in your system quietly for a very long time only to surface at the least stressful exercise and WHAM!!! death comes…..it is ravaging…and i say for those of us from West Africa.Some medication for its total and once and for all eradication need to be improvise.The Artemisin variants have not helped so far …sorry to say.
51. Peri - February 1st, 2008 at 9:29 am
Smallpox has not been completely eradicated. Samples still exist in two or three labs–one in Ft. Detrick, MD, one in Russia and the third is somewhere in Europe (I think…maybe I’m wrong about Russia). Anyway, it’s no longer in the communicable public, so the disease is considered extinct, but it’s not quite extinct because of those labs. I believe–though I’m not quite sure–that the same can be said for polio.
52. avi - February 4th, 2008 at 4:52 pm
peri:i was talking about wild smallpox not all smallpox
53. avi - February 5th, 2008 at 2:51 pm
the pandemic black death is not bubonic plaque. the disease black death is.
54. avi - February 5th, 2008 at 2:53 pm
stupid list. rabies is worst than any of what’s listed here.
55. jfrater - February 9th, 2008 at 4:45 am
avi: Polio is not extinct - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16899145
Also, in comment 49 you said: “deadliest disease is influenza now. get your facts right”
Then in comment 54 you said: “stupid list. rabies is worst than any of what’s listed here.”
Which is it? Perhaps it is YOU who should get your facts right.
56. albert0 - February 10th, 2008 at 1:56 pm
I think that the Bubonic plague (#4) was one of the three diseases that occured during the black death (#10). The other 2 during the black death being the pneumonic and septicemic plague. The septicemic plague was the worst one and had the same symptoms as the most common and least deadly bubonic plague (Large boils forming around the body) exept that the chance of survival was less because it caused servere blood poisoning (septicemia). The Pneumonic plague had also similar symptoms to the bubonic plague, but it also targeted the lungs.
57. albert0 - February 10th, 2008 at 2:02 pm
avi: in comment 47 you said: “AIDS is not that deadly anymore.” How can you possibly say that? It is still killing millions every year, and there is no cure. Tell me, how is it “not that deadly any more”?
58. avi - February 11th, 2008 at 5:43 pm
jfrater:theres a difference between worst and deadliest. albert0, by ”not that deadly anymore i meant deadliest, i wasnt saying it doesnt kill many.
59. avi - February 11th, 2008 at 5:48 pm
jfrater; did you realize the date on that polio link? it says 2006 and its 2008.
60. avi - February 12th, 2008 at 5:18 am
the AIDS thing, well most, if not all of the time, its not actually AIDS killing you. AIDS weakens ur immune system 2 the point where u die of something else. thats how AIDS is not that deadly anymore. u r right on no cure though.
61. avi - February 12th, 2008 at 5:22 am
jfrater:was even a part of the black death?WTF?what is that supposed to mean?
62. Mad - March 5th, 2008 at 9:38 am
is’nt Bubonic Plage the same thing as Black Death.
63. Randall - March 5th, 2008 at 9:42 am
Mad:
No one’s really sure. It’s the assumption that’s been made, but other diseases have been brought up as possible causes for the Black Death.
No one knows for sure, of course, because the Black Death occurred in the 14th century and there’s no way to get tissue samples of the deceased that could indicate conclusively what the disease was.
64. Bims - March 10th, 2008 at 6:02 pm
Hey Guys, just to clear up the argument that seems to be raging, the Bubonic Plague and the Black Death are two completely different things (though both sometimes result in in the formation of buboes, hence the name the Black Death). Bubonic plague is spread by rats and other rodents, and is one type of plague virus. It spread very slowly across Europe for many years, and had a much lower mortality rate than the Black Death. The black death is the name given to a particularly bad outbreak of a highly contagious airborne plague virus that was very different to the bubonic plague virus, and had much more pneumonic-like symptoms involving the resipiratory system and in some cases septicemia. This plague virus (which may have been either pneumonic or septicemic plague, or both) appeared out of nowhere then disappeared a couple of hundred years later. Bubonic plague was around both before and after the black death, but in much less widespread outbreaks. Further, it is undeniable that rats spread the bubonic plague. Therefore, bubonic plague (which was not airborne) should only have been found in areas where rats lived. Yet almost all of Iceland’s population (where there were no rats until hundreds of years later)was wiped out during two separate outbreaks of the plague, meaning the plague was an airborne virus, and was not spread by rats. This also accounts for the rapid spread of the black death plague and outbreaks over Europe and the rest of the world (days and weeks) whereas bubonic plague could only spread with the movement of rats (this takes years). So in summary, the back death itself is not a disease, it is simply a term for one terrible epidemic of plague. Epidemics of the same airborne plague virus that caused the black death broke out sporadically over a few hundred years (interestingly the virus did not seem to mutate, as the clinical features remained the same), spreading much faster than bubonic plague, and with a much higher mortality rate. Bubonic plague is still around today, and is a completely different plague virus with a much lower mortality rate that is spread by rats.
65. Me - March 22nd, 2008 at 7:24 am
Oh, the Malaria is spread by the Anopholes mosquito.
Another fatal virus spread by mosquitoes is Dengue Fever, spread by the Aedes mosquito. It struck the world in 2006 badly. The mosquito breeds in stagnant water, so a lot of actions had to be taken by Singaporean residents against it. Now it still exists.
The newest one is Chikungunya, from China. It does not spread so quickly, but caused by mosquitoes too.
The deadliest one has to be the SARS outbreak of 2003. It went across most of Asia, then spread to south Africa. Schools had to be closed down for three weeks, students take temperature exercises four times everydaypublicity in tourism experienced a sharp fall. It spreads very quickly and is 100% fatal, means once a person gets it, there is no hope of living a much longer It could actually spread across a wall. The female malay doctor who was first to discover it died because of the disease. Many were not allowed to travel in and out of their countries. Still, the holiday was all worthwhile for students who had worked hard all year, right?
66. fghhjjj - March 26th, 2008 at 12:06 pm
i never thaught that many peoplpe were even made.!!!!!
67. Ronica - April 28th, 2008 at 2:39 pm
How SAD
68. karen - May 2nd, 2008 at 7:08 pm
wow just thinkin’ bout it makes me sad and depresseded cuz everyday people die and never come back=(
69. Jak - May 4th, 2008 at 2:33 am
omfg….. how sad, i lost my uncle the the plage when he had gone over to india (he died on the 10th of may 2007)
70. Jak - May 4th, 2008 at 2:35 am
70 comments
71. Polly Odyssey - May 27th, 2008 at 6:17 pm
I wasn’t surprised when I reached #1.
72. lilman - June 3rd, 2008 at 6:56 am
piecse
73. JAred - June 22nd, 2008 at 9:47 pm
Pneumonia,Tuberculosis,Syphilis?
74. Science 6 - June 29th, 2008 at 1:18 am
Stay away from the viruses.
75. Anynomous - July 3rd, 2008 at 2:06 pm
I think it’s funny how “Avi” goes on and on like they are some freaking expert and is so rude. if you are so freaking smart, then go make your own list instead of telling someone that they’re list is stupid. Loser.
For the record Jfrater, I love your site and have been hooked on it for a while now!! thanks !
76. Momopuff - July 27th, 2008 at 11:20 am
….Black plague and bubonic plague are the same thing.
77. Cdavis - August 7th, 2008 at 4:36 am
This list is controversial only because is is not good. That is bad. Stoopid videos too. Beauty school drop-out. Go back to high school.
78. Lizzie - August 18th, 2008 at 3:27 pm
I would have included TB but a great list none the less.