http://www.livescience.com/health/090429-top5-diseases.html

Health
5 Wild Diseases We Got From Animals

By Robert Roy Britt, Editorial Director

posted: 29 April 2009 08:21 pm ET

The swine flu is just one of many deadly diseases that have jumped from animals 
to humans.

Bacteria and viruses that are deadly to one type of creature can evolve quickly 
to infect another. The cross-species infection can originate on farms or in 
markets, where conditions foster mixing of pathogens, giving them opportunities 
to swap genes and gear up to kill previously foreign hosts, like you. Microbes 
of two varieties can even gather in your gut, do some viral dancing, and evolve 
to morph you into a deadly, contagious host.

Diseases passed from animals to humans are called zoonoses, and researchers say 
they are on the rise. Here are five that have had tremendous impact on us:

5. Gorillas Gave Humans 'The Crabs'

Humans caught pubic lice from gorillas about 3 million years ago. We likely 
picked up the delightful disease, affectionately known as "crabs," not by 
sleeping with gorillas, but by sleeping in gorilla nests or eating the 
gorillas, scientists concluded in 2007. Humans, by the way, are the only 
primates that have both pubic lice and head lice (chimps have just head lice, 
and you now know which kind gorillas have).

4. Insane Mind Parasite

The bizarre parasite Toxoplasma gondii infects the brains of more than half the 
human population, including about 50 million Americans. It is thought increase 
the risk of neuroticism and may contribute to schizophrenia. However, its 
primary host is house cats. You can get it from cat feces. Initially, symptoms 
in humans are typically flu-like. But this bug never goes away. Some scientists 
think it has altered human behavior enough to shape entire cultures. Countries 
with high prevalence of T. gondii infection also have higher average 
neuroticism scores, one study found.

3. HIV/AIDS

HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, originated from chimps and other primates and 
is thought to have first infected humans at least a century ago. At the end of 
2007, an estimated 33 million people had HIV, including about 2.7 million new 
cases for the year, and about 2 million died (including 270,000 children) 
during the year. Two-thirds of HIV infections are in sub-Saharan Africa.

2. The Bubonic Plague

Nothing beats the 14-century Black Death (also called Bubonic Plague) for sheer 
global impact of a single disease outbreak and bringing civilization to its 
knees. Corpses piled in the streets from Europe to Egypt and across Asia. Some 
75 million died — at a time when there were only about 360 million to start 
with. Death came in a matter of days, and it was excruciatingly painful. Plague 
is a bacterial disease caused by Yersinia pestis. It is carried by rodents and 
even cats, but becomes most deadly to us when transmitted between people, as 
became the case in the 1300s. It took centuries for some societies to recover, 
as some of the survivors mistrusted local authorities and in some cases even 
God, under whose wrath they presumably had suffered.

1. Influenza Pandemics

The swine flu outbreaks cropping up in several countries now are nothing — so 
far — compared to historical flu outbreaks. The 1918 influenza pandemic swept 
the world within months, killing an estimated 50 million people — more than 
any other illness in recorded history for the short time frame involved. 
One-fifth of the world's population was infected, and it struck more than 25 
percent of U.S. residents.

Today, governments are more prepared, scientifically and logistically, to 
handle flu outbreaks. Still, there is no vaccine for swine flu, and it could 
take months, or more, to develop one.

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