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Biological Defense
Biological weapons are used to intentionally
disseminate infectious agents or toxins that
would otherwise appear only naturally or not at
all. Such agents can be divided into bacteria,
viruses, rickettsiae, fungi or toxins. These
cause a wide range of diseases including
anthrax, smallpox, Q fever, or generalized
toxicity throughout the body. The features that
influence a biologic agent’s potential for use
as a weapon includes infectivity, virulence,
toxicity, pathogenicity, incubation period,
transmissibility, lethality and stability.
The advent of genetic engineering has had a
profound impact on the threat from biological
weapons. Agents that are extremely harmful in
nature can be modified to: (a) increase
virulence, (b) increase the production rate per
cell, (c) enhance survivability under
environmental stress, and (d) improve the
ability to escape detection by the host immune
system. Since most agents are living organisms,
their natural replication after dissemination
increases the potential impact of a strike,
making such bioweapons even more attractive. Any
country possessing a pharmaceutical or food
storage infrastructure already has an inherent
stabilization and storage system for biological
agents.
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