plague

(noun)

an epidemic or pandemic caused by any pestilence

Related Terms

  • zoonosis
  • pathogen

Examples of plague in the following topics:

  • History of Bacterial Diseases

    • From 541 to 750 C.E.., an outbreak of what was likely a bubonic plague (the Plague of Justinian), eliminated one-quarter to one-half of the human population in the eastern Mediterranean region.
    • The bubonic plague would strike Europe more than once.
    • Bubonic plague struck London hard again in the mid-1600s .
    • Although contracting bubonic plague before antibiotics meant almost certain death, the bacterium responds to several types of modern antibiotics; mortality rates from plague are now very low.
    • Such was the case with bubonic plague.
  • Overcoming Density-Dependent Regulation

    • In the fourteenth century, the bubonic plague killed as many as 100 million people: between 30 to 60 percent of Europe's population.
    • Today, however, the plague and other infectious diseases have much less of an impact.
  • Protists as Plant Pathogens

    • Late blight continues to plague potato crops in certain parts of the United States and Russia, wiping out as much as 70 percent of crops when no pesticides are applied.
  • Neurodevelopmental Disorders: Mental Illnesses

    • Debilitating mental disorders plague approximately 12.5 million Americans (about 1 in 17 people) at an annual cost of more than $300 billion.
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