Volume 20 No 9 (2022)
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AN INVESTIGATIVE STUDY ON INFECTIOUS DISEASES CAUSED BY PEST AND INSECTS: BIOMEDICAL AND ZOOLOGICAL EVALUATION
Pavitra Sharma
Abstract
Disease-carrying insects and rodents are not limited to the likes of fleas, cockroaches, mosquitoes, and rats. Lyme disease, strep throat, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, salmonella, malaria, dengue fever, and many more are all transmitted by insects. Mosquitoes and other insects may spread diseases like West Nile virus and Zika virus. The potential for bats to spread illness is substantial, making them a considerable health danger in the same way that other rodents are. Included in this group are viruses like the plague and hantavirus. The potential for the spread of zoonotic diseases in India is high. The potential for laboratory manipulation to increase the virulence, transmissibility, or resistance to therapy regimens of naturally occurring zoonotic infections is a source of concern. If any of these bugs are present, you may assume the product is contaminated and shouldn't use it. Insect and mite infestations pose a threat of ingestion (though this is usually only a worry at very high pest densities), and certain humans and animals may be allergic to the organism, its components, or its waste products if they have been exposed to it in the past. It's possible that insects are like this. Since their allergens are similar to those found in common house dust mites, mites offer a particularly dangerous hazard despite their little size and extensive dispersion. The dangers that storage mites pose to human health are often overlooked. It is suggested that further research be done to understand the exact nature of the engagement of both insects and dust mites in the development of allergic responses. Pests may have harmful effects on people even if they are designed to kill insects
Keywords
Health, Diseases, pathogen, insects, pest, dangerous hazard
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