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Tell Me More About Polio
By Christopher J. Rutty, Ph.D.
Health Heritage Research Services
POLIO (Poliomyelitis) is one of the most dramatic
infectious diseases of the 20th century, which, thanks to the mass use
of two types of polio vaccines introduced in the mid-1950s and early
1960s, is now approaching global eradication. During the first half of
the 20th century, the grim terror of crippling polio epidemics
regularly, though randomly, swept across the United States and Canada
(and most of the industrialized world) with increasing ferocity,
suddenly leaving large numbers of otherwise healthy children, and
adults, permanently disabled, or dead due to paralysis of their
breathing muscles.
Polio is caused by damage to the motor neurons (or voluntary nerves) of
the spinal cord after an infection by the poliovirus. About two weeks
after exposure to the virus, paralytic polio is characterized by an
acute illness with fever and muscle pain, followed by varying degrees
of weakness or paralysis in one or more parts of the body, such as the
arms, legs, feet, hands, and back. These effects are often permanent.
The most vulnerable to the disease are young children from about 4 to
14. The poliovirus can also strike nerves in the upper spinal cord and
brain and cause deadly paralysis of the throat and chest, and sometimes
even the heart. For chest paralysis cases, which included many adults,
large "iron lungs" did the breathing for them; their entire body,
except their head, sealed inside these "marvellous metal monsters," as
iron lungs were described in the 1930s when they first became
available. During the major epidemics of the 1950s there were often
hospital polio wards crammed with 50 to 100 iron lungs running at
once.
Polio is an ancient, though mainly harmless, infection of the
intestinal tract that rarely progresses beyond a mild flu-like illness
to invade the central nervous system and cause damage in the spinal
cord. In nature, the poliovirus can only multiply in humans, although
some monkey species can be deliberately infected in laboratories, and
it can only survive outside the body in water or sewage for limited
periods of time. The virus is spread from person to person by invisible
carriers, mostly by faecal oral contamination through such common
activities as changing a baby's diaper. During the late 19th and early
20th century, paralytic polio moved from an isolated childhood
affliction, to a worsening epidemic threat, ironically, because of
improving public health and hygiene standards that prevented, or
delayed, an almost universal immunizing exposure to the virus during
infancy when the body's immune system could easily fight it off before
it caused any damage.
Until the late 19th century, and even into the 1930s, polio was
generally known as "infantile paralysis." It was not medically
described until 1789, and was not believed to be contagious until the
1910s, despite an increasing frequency of reported cases and outbreaks
in Europe and North America during the second half of the 19th century.
Though the specific damage it caused in the spinal cord was recognized
by 1860, the poliovirus itself was not discovered until 1908. Despite
one of the greatest fundraising and medical research efforts in history
inspired by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was paralyzed in
the legs by polio as an adult in 1921, little was understood about how
the virus spread until the 1940s. The first great step towards
prevention came when the injectable Salk vaccine was developed and mass
tested by American and Canadian scientists in the early 1950s and first
made widely available to children in 1955. In the early 1960s a second
type of polio protection, the Sabin oral vaccine, was introduced.
During the epidemic era, polio was known as the "summer plague," its
incidence peaking each "polio season" with the summer heat and
vanishing with the first autumn frost. However, a deadly polio epidemic
among the native Inuit (Eskimos) in the Canadian Arctic during the
winter of 1948-49 shattered this illusion and dramatically showed that
polio had no geographical nor environmental boundaries. The virus had
been brought into a small community in the Eastern Arctic by a
missionary who had been infected while in the south, causing it to
spread amongst an Inuit population that had no natural immunity. Adults
were the most seriously affected. There is evidence of previous polio
outbreaks in the Arctic among the native population, as well as
settlers, but none any earlier than the 1920s.
Though nearing extinction today, polio remains a major problem in parts
of Asia and Africa where access to the vaccines is limited. For those
stricken by paralytic polio during the epidemic era, or who were not
vaccinated, and who had compensated for its damage, an alarming number
are now facing the debilitating late effects of the disease in the form
of Post Polio Syndrome (PPS). Among those who faced epidemic polio as
children and who are struggling now with PPS are such celebrities as
musicians Neil Young and Joni Mitchell. Though likely eradicated by the
end of the 20th century, the disabling physical and psychological
effects of polio will continue to echo around the world well into the
new millennium.
FURTHER READING:
Black, Kathryn: In the Shadow of Polio: A Personal and
Social History (New York: Addison Wesley, 1996)
Bredeson, Carmen: Jonas Salk: Discoverer of the Polio
Vaccine (People to Know Series) (Hillside, N.J.: Enslow
Publishers, Inc., 1993).
Carter, Richard: Breakthrough: The Saga of Jonas Salk
(New York City: Trident Press, 1966).
Cohn, Victor: Sister Kenny: The Woman Who Challenged the
Doctors (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1975).
Curson, Marjorie N.: Jonas Salk (Pioneers in Change Series)
(Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Silver Burdett Press, 1990).
Davis, Fred: Passage Through Crisis: Polio Victims and Their
Families (with a new introduction by the author) (New
Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 1963, 1991).
Gallagher, Hugh G.: FDR's Splendid Deception (New York
City: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1985).
Gould, Tony: A Summer Plague: Polio and its Survivors
(London: Yale University Press, 1995).
Halstead, Lauro S. and Gunnar Grimby (eds.), Post-Polio
Syndrome (Philadelphia: Hanley & Belfus, Inc, 1995)
Klein, Aaron E.: Trial By Fury: The Polio Vaccine Controversy
(New York City: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1972).
Paul, John R.: A History of Poliomyelitis (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1971).
Rogers, Naomi: Dirt and Disease: Polio Before FDR,
(New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1990).
Rutty, Christopher J.: "Do Something! Do Anything! Poliomyelitis in
Canada, 1927-1962," (Ph.D. Thesis, University of Toronto, 1995)
Smith, Jane S.: Patenting the Sun: Polio and the Salk Vaccine
(New York City: William Morrow and Co., 1990).
Taylor, Russell F.: Polio '53: A Memorial for Russell Frederick
Taylor (Edmonton: University of Alberta Press, 1990).
Young, Scott: Neil and Me (Toronto: McClelland and
Stewart, 1984)
POLIO WEBSITE LINKS
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