Warning: This post contains graphic images of medical conditions.
Dear Donald G. McNeil Jr.:
Thank you for speaking to students in my class yesterday, and for speaking to a larger group of students later. I enjoyed meeting you and hearing your tales about covering “germs and worms.”
I too have a fascination with disease. Though I do not write about it for The New York Times, I do write. Readers of this blog are forced to go with me occasionally down the rabbit hole of information about horrible things.
I learned about two new disorders this week: Cancrum Oris and Buruli Ulcer.
Cancrum Oris is straight out of a horror movie. Otherwise known as “Noma,” Cancrum Oris is a type of gangrene that only affects the face, and only appears in children. It is caused by two different bacteria and usually shows up after another serious disease such as measles or scarlet fever.
Look away now if you don’t want to see.
Antibiotics and improved nutrition can help this disorder from getting worse. And then there’s plastic surgery, which is sadly out of the realm of the possible for many of these poor children. (There is a reason they are malnourished.)
Buruli Ulcer is a tropical disease caused by a bacteria in the leprosy and tuberculosis family. It starts innocently with a simple nodule. It affects skin and can get into the bone. Fun!
Warning: All kinds of terrible up ahead!
The good news is that a vaccine is in development.
But you, as the Germ Guru, must know all this already.
I just wanted you to know that I share your fascination.
Thanks again for visiting and I hope to see you again soon.
Yours in pestilence,
Beth
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