Inoculation
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Inoculation is the placement of something to where it will grow or reproduce, and is most commonly used in respect of the introduction of a serum, vaccine, or antigenic substance into the body of a human or animal, especially to produce or boost immunity to a specific disease; but also can be used to refer to the communication of a disease to a living organism by transferring its causative agent into the organism, to implant microorganisms or infectious material into a culture medium such as a brewers vat or a petri dish, to safeguard as if by inoculation, to introduce an idea or attitude into someone's mind, any placement of microorganisms or viruses at a site where infection is possible such as to increase soybeans' nitrogen fixation one can treat soybeans at planting with Rhizobium japonicum inoculant. The verb "to inoculate" is from Middle English "inoculaten", which meant "to graft a scion (a scion is a plant part to be grafted onto another plant); which in turn is from Latin "inoculre" or "inocult-".[1][2]
This article covers variolation, inoculation as a method of purposefully infecting a person with smallpox (Variola) in a controlled manner so as to minimise the severity of the infection and also to induce immunity against further infection. See vaccination for post-variolation methods of safeguarding as if by inoculation by administering weakened or dead pathogens to a healthy person or animal with the intent of conferring immunity against a targeted form of a related disease agent.
Today the terms inoculation, vaccination and immunisation are used more or less interchangeably and popularly refer to the process of artificial induction of immunity against various infectious diseases. The microorganism used in an inoculation is called the inoculant or inoculum.
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[edit] Origins
The earliest use of inoculation was from the Chinese. It is recorded that the Chinese inoculated their patients by making them snort the powdered scabs of smallpox victims. Another method of their inoculation was by scratching the powder into their skin.[3][4]
[edit] Importation to the West
The practice was introduced to the west by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (May 26, 1689-August 21, 1762). Lady Montagu's husband, Edward Wortley Montagu, served as the British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1716 to 1717. She witnessed inoculation in Istanbul,[3] and was greatly depressed[citation needed]: she had lost a brother to smallpox and bore facial scars from the disease herself. In March 1718 she had the embassy surgeon, Charles Maitland, inoculate her five-year-old son. In 1721, after returning to England, she had her four-year-old daughter inoculated[4]. She invited friends to see her daughter, including Sir Hans Sloane, the King's physician. Sufficient interest arose that Maitland gained permission to test inoculation at Newgate prison in exchange for their freedom on six prisoners due to be hanged[citation needed], an experiment which was witnessed by a number of notable doctors. The experiment succeeded, and in 1722 the Prince of Wales' daughters received inoculations[5].
The practice of inoculation slowly spread amongst the royal families of Europe, usually followed by more general adoption amongst the people.
The practice is documented in America as early as 1721. Cotton Mather in Boston had a description of the African practice of inoculation from his slave[6] Onesimus and encouraged its application, with considerable controversy and strife. Fearing the outbreak of an epidemic, the editor of the South Carolina Gazette published a detailed description of the inoculation process in the April 22 issue. In Boston, there was opposition from churchmen regarding the practice who regarded it as "bidding defiance to Heaven itself, even to the will of God", though one historian also notes that "...within a year or two after the first experiment nearly three hundred persons had been inoculated ... in Boston and neighbouring towns, and out of these only six had died; whereas, during the same period, out of nearly six thousand persons who had taken smallpox naturally, and had received only the usual medical treatment, nearly one thousand had died." (from A History Of The Warfare Of Science With Theology In Christendom by Andrew Dickson White.)
| Natural experiment in inoculation around Boston, 1721 | |||
| Total | Died | % Mortality | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Variolated | c 300 | 6 | c 2% |
| Unvariolated | c 6000 | c 1000 | "about 14%"[7] |
In France considerable opposition arose to the introduction of inoculation. Voltaire, in his Lettres Philosophiques, wrote a criticism of his countrymen for being opposed to inoculation and having so little regard for the welfare of their children, concluding that "had inoculation been practised in France it would have saved the lives of thousands.".[8]
Inoculation grew in popularity in Europe through the 18th century. Given the high prevalence and often severe consequences of smallpox in Europe in the 18th century (according to Voltaire, there was a 60% incidence of first infection, a 20% mortality rate, and a 20% incidence of severe scarring),[9] many parents felt that the benefits of inoculation outweighted the risks and so inoculated their children.[10]
[edit] Mechanism
Two forms of the disease of Smallpox were recognised, now known to be due to two strains of the Variola virus. Those contracting Variola Minor had a greatly reduced risk of death — 1-2% — compared to those contracting Variola Major with 20% mortality. Infection via inhaled viral particles in droplets spread the infection more widely than the deliberate infection through a small skin wound. The smaller, localised infection is adequate to stimulate the immune system to produce specific immunity to the virus, while requiring more generations of the virus to reach levels of infection likely to kill the patient. The rising immunity terminates the infection. So the twofold effect is to ensure the less fatal form of the disease is the one caught, and to give the immune system the best start possible in combating it.
[edit] Supplanted by vaccination
In 1796, Edward Jenner introduced the far safer method of inoculation with the cowpox virus, a non-fatal virus that also induced immunity to smallpox. This led to smallpox inoculation falling into disuse and eventually being banned in England in 1840.
[edit] See also
- Inoculation effect
- Stress inoculation
[edit] References
- ^ Your Dictionary
- ^ Inoculation entry at Gardening section of mimi.hu
- ^ Paul Vallely, How Islamic Inventors Changed the World, The Independent, 11 March 2006.
- ^ Strathern, Paul (2005). A Brief History of Medicine. London: Robinson, p. 179. ISBN 1-84529-155-7.
- ^ Strathern, Paul (2005). A Brief History of Medicine. London: Robinson, p. 179. ISBN 1-84529-155-7.
- ^ Silverman,Kenneth. ‘’The Life and Times of Cotton Mather’’, Harper & Row, New York, 1984. ISBN 0-06-015231-1, p. 339.
- ^ Harris DF. Edward Jenner and Vaccination. Retrieved on 2007-03-04.
- ^ Lettres Philosophiques. Voltaire. (English translation on-line [1])
- ^ In fact, the mortality rate of the Varoiola Minor form of smallpox then found in Europe was 1-3% as opposed to 30-50% for the Variola Major type found elsewhere; however. blindness, infertility, and severe scarring were common. Figures from "The Search for Immunisation", In Our Time, BBC Radio 4 (2006). [2]
- ^ Letter of Lady Montagu reproduced at http://www.foundersofscience.net/lady_mary_montagu.htm viewed 18 March 2006
- US National Library of Medicine
- Lettres Philosophiques. Voltaire (English translation)
- Inoculation in India An account of the manner of inoculating for the small pox in the India. Holwell, J Z. RCP
- Edward Jenner and Vaccination. Harris
- A HISTORY OF THE WARFARE OF SCIENCE WITH THEOLOGY IN CHRISTENDOM Andrew Dickson White.
- [6]Arm-to-Arm Against Bioterrorism by Donald W. Miller, Jr., MD
- The Science of Agricultural Inoculation by INTX Microbials
Vaccines, Vaccination, Immunization, and Inoculation | |
|---|---|
| Development | Adjuvants • Cancer vaccines • DNA vaccination • HIV • Live vector vaccine • Models • Timeline • Trial |
| Administration | ACIP • GAVI • VAERS • Vaccine court • Vaccine injury • Policy • Schedule • VSD |
| Live vaccines | Anthrax • BCG • Flu • MMR • MMRV • Polio(OPV) • Smallpox • Varicella |
| Inactivated/toxoid vaccines | inactivated virus: Flu • HAV • Polio(IPV) •• inactivated bacteria/toxoid: DTwP •• conjugate: Hib • PCV |
| Other vaccines | subunit: Anthrax • DTaP • HPV •• recombinant DNA: HBV •• other: Anthrax • PPV |
| Controversy | A-CHAMP • MMR • NCVIA • Pox party • Safe Minds • Thiomersal |
| See also | List of vaccine topics • Epidemiology |
fr:variolisation ja:接種 no:Inokulasjon sr:Инокулација fi:Inokulaatio zh:注射疫苗

