Every Teardrop is a Waterfall (of viruses)

In the midst of an overnight ICU shift, my right eye started to water. It then began to burn and itch. Now, it's red. I have conjunctivitis (pink eye). But, I didn't rush to start antibiotic eye drops because this condition is almost certainly viral and will run its miserable course.

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The virus that is a major player in this realm is the awesomely-shaped adenovirus, a ubiqutious pathogen that causes colds and other conditions. However, when a patient with symptoms like mine shows up at an urgent care center or emergency department, invariably a prescription for some sort of antimicrobial drops is obtained. Such drops really do nothing for the condition except waste money and expose individuals to unnecessary antimicrobials. It's not that physicians don't know that most conjunctivitis is viral in nature, they are often just responding to the patient's expectation of receiving an antibiotic.

There is a point-of-care test for adenovirus that is able to detect the presence of the virus in tears. However, I don't know of any place that uses it routinely. This type of test--like all viral tests--has the potential to decrease the prescription of unnecessary antibiotics because physicians, armed with a positive viral test result, are much more able to convince patients of the viral nature of their condition. The economics of the test may be behind its slow uptake outside of ophthalmologists' offices.

After all that, it would be fitting if my own conjunctivitis turned out to be bacterial.

Sherlock Holmes: Proto-Infectious Disease Physician

"I love the detective work."

That's the answer I give when people ask me how I chose infectious diseases as my subspecialty. Detective work in infectious disease involves reasoning from the perceptual level, according to the laws of logic, to arrive at a diagnosis and formulate a treatment plan. This method, which has both deductive and inductive aspects, is not exclusively applicable to medicine, but all of life. One realm, however, where it is employed in a striking manner is in forensic science and the practitioner par excellence is the fictional Sherlock Holmes who, fittingly, was the creation of the physician Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Not surprisingly, when I came across the book The Remedy: Robert Koch, Arthur Conan Doyle & the Quest to Cure Tuberculosis, I had to read it immediately. This excellent  book was written by former Wired executive editor Thomas Goetz, now CEO of the innovative health data concern Iodine. The book is focused on two seemingly disparate topics that Goetz expertly weaves together into a cohesive and illuminating whole: the evolution of the germ theory of disease and its intersection with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Tuberculosis can scarcely be mentioned without thinking of Robert Koch, the Nobel Prize-winning physician. Koch definitively proved that the dread disease was caused by an invading pathogen, Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Such a discovery provided further evidence of the veracity of the germ theory of disease, which was catapulted from fringe hypothesis status by Louis Pasteur. Koch's contributions to the study of tuberculosis, anthrax, cholera, and other infectious diseases--in my view and in Goetz's--pale before the enormous feat he performed in developing and articulating his eponymous postulates. The postulates form the basis for proving a pathogen is the cause of a disease in question. This achievement, as Goetz recognizes, cannot be understated.

The other strand of the story told is that of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, a physician in practice who longed to be a writer. Goetz writes of how Doyle employed his medical worldview, which consisted of meticulous observation coupled with deductive reasoning, to create the character of Sherlock Holmes, who first appeared in two early novels. However, Holmes ascended as a celebrity in his own right after a fascinating incident: Koch's mistaken claim regarding tuberculin. What Koch claimed was that tuberculin, a glycerin extract of M.tuberculosis now in common use in tuberculosis skin testing, was a remedy for tuberculosis. Doyle, dispatched to Germany as physician correspondent for an English paper, was unconvinced of the data behind this claim and his subsequent article helped to publicize the errors behind what came to be a scandal over tuberculin. Doyle soon fully committed to writing and left medicine; Sherlock Holmes soared to the point that he even eclipsed his creator. 

The book also contains many historical gems, provides a thorough treatment of how the germ theory increasingly gained acceptance one mind at a time, and concretizes how medicine (and detective fiction) was revolutionized. 

I highly recommend it.

How to Tame a Virus- A Review of *Paralyzed with Fear: The Story of Polio*

Polio is an infectious disease that holds a special allure for Pittsburghers. It was here that Jonas Salk conducted the research that led to his famous vaccine, forever changing the relationship between humans and this virus. I often imagine what it must have been like to witness Dr. Salk's triumphant return to Pittsburgh--police escort and all--after the vaccine was shown to be efficacious. Dr. Salk's achievement, however, is not something that stands alone; it is part of a pantheon of scientific advances (not the least of which includes Albert Sabin's version of the vaccine). 

There have been many books written about this virus, Jonas Salk, and other aspects of the fight to rid the world of this virus. One such book cost me a considerable amount of money (and is now available for $3.50). 

I recently completed one of the newer additions to this growing library: Gareth William's Paralyzed with Fear: The Story of Polio

I really enjoyed this book primarily because it provided a broad, historical, inductively-based scientific approach to the topic. Instead of providing a simple chronological listing of the landmark achievements that led to the control of polio, Dr. Williams employed an approach that places the reader on the trail of scientific inquiry that painstakingly led scientists, step-by-step (and down some unfortunate blind alleys), to higher rungs in the ladder of knowledge which culminated in Eckard Wimmer's synthesis--from scratch--of polio in 2002. 

Some highlights of the book include: a description of the well-known rivalry between Sabin and Salk (which included a particularly nasty bit of correspondence in which Sabin wrote to Salk that "love and kisses were being saved up" for him); DA Henderson's discovery of vaccine-associated paralytic polio (VAPP) linked to the Sabin vaccine in the 1960s; the anti-vaccine movement's opposition to the vaccine; a thorough discussion of the discredited hypothesis of the polio vaccine being the origin of HIV; speculation that FDR may have actually had Guillan-Barre Syndrome (not polio); the "fear campaign" designed to spur public concern in the US over this disease, which was never as big a threat to US public health as other diseases; and countless other anecdotes that make for good reading.

As of today polio eradication remains a daunting task with 89 cases occurring in 9 countries this year, 2 of which are new to the list from 2013. Nigeria, Afghanistan, and Pakistan are the 3 most important heads of this hydra that must be decapitated if eradication is to succeed. It remains to be seen whether this eradication will be successful but one thing is certain: the polio vaccine and the individuals who created it, or whose work led to its creation, have thoroughly destroyed the ability of this virus to wage war on mankind. It only remains for humans to allow the destruction to be total.