carrier

of disease
Also known as: vector

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Assorted References

  • cause of typhoid epidemics
    • Salmonella Typhi
      In typhoid fever

      …contaminated, however, by a human carrier of the disease who is employed in handling and processing them; by flies; or by the use of polluted water for cleaning purposes. Shellfish, particularly oysters, grown in polluted water and fresh vegetables grown on soil fertilized or contaminated by untreated sewage are other…

      Read More

role of

    insects

    • Brain cancer; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
      In disease: Epidemiology

      …by means of an insect carrier, or vector. Often animal parasites have intermediate hosts in which one or more phases of their life cycles occur; this results in an obligatory sequence of hosts in the life history of the parasite. With the disease schistosomiasis in humans, for example, the blood…

      Read More
    • insect diversity
      In insect: Medical significance

      …by insects, which serve as vectors of pathogens. Malaria is caused by the protozoan Plasmodium, which spends part of its developmental cycle in Anopheles mosquitoes. Epidemic relapsing fever, caused by spirochetes, is transmitted by the louse

      Read More
    • fleas
      • lice
        • human head louse
          In louse

          …dog lice is the intermediate host of the dog tapeworm, and a rat louse is a transmitter of murine typhus among rats.

          Read More
      • sand flies
        • In sand fly

          …Asia, Phlebotomus transmits the pappataci fever virus; and in parts of South America, Africa, and Asia it carries the protozoan parasites causing kala azar, Oriental sore, espundia, and bartonellosis. The name sand fly is also used for certain species of the black fly and biting midge (qq.v) families.

          Read More
      • Typhoid Mary
        • Typhoid Mary
          In Typhoid Mary

          ) was an infamous typhoid carrier who allegedly gave rise to multiple outbreaks of typhoid fever.

          Read More
      • viruses
        • blight
          In plant disease: Transmission

          …and mites, which are called vectors of the virus. The principal virus-carrying insects are about 200 species of aphids, which transmit mostly mosaic viruses, and more than 100 species of leafhoppers, which carry yellows-type viruses. Whiteflies, thrips,

          Read More
      Quick Facts
      Born:
      May 13, 1857, Almora, India
      Died:
      Sept. 16, 1932, Putney Heath, London, Eng. (aged 75)
      Awards And Honors:
      Nobel Prize (1902)

      Sir Ronald Ross (born May 13, 1857, Almora, India—died Sept. 16, 1932, Putney Heath, London, Eng.) was a British doctor who received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1902 for his work on malaria. His discovery of the malarial parasite in the gastrointestinal tract of the Anopheles mosquito led to the realization that malaria was transmitted by Anopheles, and laid the foundation for combating the disease.

      After graduating in medicine (1879), Ross entered the Indian Medical Service and served in the third Anglo-Burmese War (1885). On leave he studied bacteriology in London (1888–89) and then returned to India, where, prompted by Patrick Manson’s guidance and assistance, he began (1895) a series of investigations on malaria. He discovered the presence of the malarial parasite within the Anopheles mosquito in 1897. Using birds that were sick with malaria, he was soon able to ascertain the entire life cycle of the malarial parasite, including its presence in the mosquito’s salivary glands. He demonstrated that malaria is transmitted from infected birds to healthy ones by the bite of a mosquito, a finding that suggested the disease’s mode of transmission to humans.

      Ross returned to England in 1899 and joined the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine. He was knighted in 1911. In 1912 he became physician for tropical diseases at King’s College Hospital, London, and later director of the Ross Institute and Hospital for Tropical Diseases, founded in his honour. In addition to mathematical papers, poems, and fictional works, he wrote The Prevention of Malaria (1910).

      This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.