Zoonotic Diseases Zoonotic diseases are infectious diseases that are naturally transmitted between animals and humans. These diseases can be caused by bacteria, viruses, parasites, or fungi and may spread through direct contact with animals, consumption of contaminated food or water, bites from insects or animals, or environmental exposure. Common examples include rabies , avian influenza, Ebola, COVID-19 , brucellosis , and Lyme disease. Zoonotic diseases pose significant global public health challenges due to factors such as climate change, deforestation, wildlife trade, intensive farming, and increased human-animal interaction. Effective prevention and control rely on surveillance, vaccination, biosecurity, food safety, and the One Health approach integrating human, animal, and environmental health. Zoonotic diseases, zoonoses, animal-to-human transmission, emerging infectious diseases, One Health, zoonotic infections, wildlife diseases, public health #ZoonoticDiseases #Zoo...
Anti Immunity Disease Anti-immunity diseases, commonly referred to as autoimmune diseases, occur when the immune system mistakenly identifies the body’s own cells , tissues , or organs as foreign and mounts an immune response against them. This abnormal immune activation leads to chronic inflammation, tissue damage, and functional impairment of affected organs . Anti-immunity diseases can target specific organs-such as the pancreas in type 1 diabetes or the joints in rheumatoid arthritis-or involve multiple systems, as seen in systemic lupus erythematosus. Genetic predisposition , environmental triggers, infections, and immune regulatory defects all contribute to disease development. Understanding immune tolerance, autoantibodies, and inflammatory pathways has been critical in advancing diagnostics and developing targeted immunotherapies aimed at controlling disease activity and improving patient quality of life. Anti-immunity disease, Autoimmune disorders, Immune dysregulation...