Jordi Casals I Ariet
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Jordi Casals i Ariet (born 15 May 1911, Viladrau, Osona, Spain; died 10 February 2004) was a
Catalan Catalan may refer to: Catalonia From, or related to Catalonia: * Catalan language, a Romance language * Catalans, an ethnic group formed by the people from, or with origins in, Northern or southern Catalonia Places * 13178 Catalan, asteroid #1 ...
physician and
epidemiologist Epidemiology is the study and analysis of the distribution (who, when, and where), patterns and risk factor, determinants of health and disease conditions in a defined population. It is a cornerstone of public health, and shapes policy decision ...
. Casals' major legacies include his work on
viral taxonomy Virus classification is the process of naming viruses and placing them into a Alpha taxonomy, taxonomic system similar to the classification systems used for cell (biology), cellular organisms. Viruses are classified by phenotypic characteristics, ...
, especially for insect-borne viruses, and significant improvements in safety in the handling of dangerous pathogens in laboratory settings. The latter stem in part from an incident in 1969 at Yale where Casals barely survived the Lassa fever he contracted while studying the virus in the laboratory, and another staff member died.


Early life and education

Casals served in the Spanish Army before studying medicine in Barcelona, where he graduated in 1934. He remained as an intern at
Hospital Clínic de Barcelona Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, officially Hospital Clínic i Provincial de Barcelona, is a university hospital founded in 1906 and based in Barcelona. It opened its doors on December 23, 1906, with a capacity of 400 patients, some of which were mov ...
until 1936, when he emigrated to the United States during the
Spanish Civil War The Spanish Civil War ( es, Guerra Civil Española)) or The Revolution ( es, La Revolución, link=no) among Nationalists, the Fourth Carlist War ( es, Cuarta Guerra Carlista, link=no) among Carlists, and The Rebellion ( es, La Rebelión, lin ...
.


Career

After graduating from medical school in Barcelona, Casals moved to New York in 1936, and first worked in the Department of Pathology at
Cornell University Medical College The Joan & Sanford I. Weill Medical College of Cornell University is Cornell University's biomedical research unit and medical school located in Upper East Side, Manhattan, New York City, New York. Weill Cornell Medicine is affiliated with New ...
in New York. In 1938, he moved to the Rockefeller Institute of Medical Research (now Rockefeller University) in Manhattan. There he began his research on classifying viruses which later became one of his most important legacies. In 1952, Casals joined the
Rockefeller Foundation The Rockefeller Foundation is an American private foundation and philanthropic medical research and arts funding organization based at 420 Fifth Avenue, New York City. The second-oldest major philanthropic institution in America, after the Carneg ...
, where he worked on analysis of samples collected in the field. His collection of viral disease agents gathered during this period was the germ of the future
reference collection A reference collection is a collecting, collection of objects maintained for the purpose of study and authentication. Reference collections are generally large undertakings maintained by institutions; instead of having a single representative of e ...
at the
World Health Organization The World Health Organization (WHO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations responsible for international public health. The WHO Constitution states its main objective as "the attainment by all peoples of the highest possible level of h ...
. In 1964, the Rockefeller Foundation moved its insect-borne disease group to Yale University, and in 1965 Casals therefore moved to
New Haven New Haven is a city in the U.S. state of Connecticut. It is located on New Haven Harbor on the northern shore of Long Island Sound in New Haven County, Connecticut and is part of the New York City metropolitan area. With a population of 134,02 ...
and was appointed professor of epidemiology at
Yale University Yale University is a private research university in New Haven, Connecticut. Established in 1701 as the Collegiate School, it is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and among the most prestigious in the wo ...
(within the Rockefeller Foundation).. In 1969 he became deathly ill while investigating Lassa virus, and barely survived; a technician fell ill several months later and died. Casals went on to investigate the Lassa outbreaks in West Africa. In
1973 Events January * January 1 - The United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and Denmark enter the European Economic Community, which later becomes the European Union. * January 15 – Vietnam War: Citing progress in peace negotiations, U.S. ...
, biologists in
Sierra Leone Sierra Leone,)]. officially the Republic of Sierra Leone, is a country on the southwest coast of West Africa. It is bordered by Liberia to the southeast and Guinea surrounds the northern half of the nation. Covering a total area of , Sierra ...
, with the help of teams from Yale and the CDC, determined that the Lassa virus was being passed to humans from wild rats. Casals also continued his sample collection, collaborating with the CDC to establish what eventually became the World Health Organization's
reference collection A reference collection is a collecting, collection of objects maintained for the purpose of study and authentication. Reference collections are generally large undertakings maintained by institutions; instead of having a single representative of e ...
of arboviruses. Casals left Yale in 1981 for
Mount Sinai School of Medicine The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (ISMMS or Mount Sinai), formerly the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, is a private medical school in New York City. It is the academic teaching arm of the Mount Sinai Health System, which manages eigh ...
. and remained there until his death. His last paper was published in 1998. Jordi Casals carried out noted studies on multiple diseases, including Lassa fever. He identified Lassa virus and a large number of other pathogens; among them, the
Zika virus ''Zika virus'' (ZIKV; pronounced or ) is a member of the virus family ''Flaviviridae''. It is spread by daytime-active ''Aedes'' mosquitoes, such as '' A. aegypti'' and '' A. albopictus''. Its name comes from the Ziika Forest of Uganda, whe ...
. Casals was a consultant for numerous health institutions and organizations, and was awarded the Kimble Methodology Award by the American Public Health Association for his scientific curriculum. He was considered a world authority in the field of viruses, especially arboviruses. Casals collaborated with many institutions during his career, such as the WHO, the United States National Institute of Mental Health, and was elected to many U.S. and international societies. He worked with hundreds of scientists worldwide during his career, and was known for his scientific accuracy and professional ethics.


Lassa research and incidents


Discovery

In January 1969, missionary nurse Laura Wine fell ill with a mysterious disease she contracted from an obstetrical patient in the Lassa Mission Hospital where she worked in Lassa, Nigeria a village in
Borno State Borno State is a state in the North-East geopolitical zone of Nigeria, bordered by Yobe to the west, Gombe to the southwest, and Adamawa to the south while its eastern border forms part of the national border with Cameroon, its northern border ...
. She was then airlifted to a better-equipped hospital
Jos Jos is a city in the north central region of Nigeria. The city has a population of about 900,000 residents based on the 2006 census. Popularly called "J-Town", it is the administrative capital and largest city of Plateau State. During British ...
, Nigeria where she died the next day. Subsequently, two other nurses at the Jos hospital became infected, Charlotte Shaw, who died, and fifty-two-year-old nurse Lily Pinneo, commonly known as Penny, who had cared for Wine. Pinneo was flown to New York, along with tissues from other patients and victims, and treated for nine weeks at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, and survived. A specialist in tropical diseases at the Columbia Presbyterian provided samples from Pinneo to the Yale Arbovirus Research Unit. While at Yale, Casals and his team studied new viruses from Africa, and he identified an unknown virus in the blood of three American nurses who had been missionaries in Nigeria, in the village of Lassa in the
Borno State Borno State is a state in the North-East geopolitical zone of Nigeria, bordered by Yobe to the west, Gombe to the southwest, and Adamawa to the south while its eastern border forms part of the national border with Cameroon, its northern border ...
in the northeastern part of the country. The newly isolated virus was named after the village.


Incidents

In June 1969, three months after Lassa fever reached Yale University, Casals fell ill with a fever and cold-like symptoms, with chills and severe muscle pain. On June 15, he was placed in an isolation unit. He had been tested for Lassa, but the results wouldn't be known for four days, and it was uncertain that he would survive that long. The decision was made for him to be inoculated with antibodies from nurse Lily Pinneo (convalescing at home in Rochester, New York), a decision researchers made according to Robert W. McCollum, chief of epidemiology. Casals recovered, and resumed his research. In December 1969, a technician at the laboratory was admitted to a hospital in Pennsylvania where he was visiting his family, with a fever of and in acute distress. Antibiotics and other courses of treatment were prescribed, but he died five days later. A blood test confirmed the presence of Lassa virus. Although he worked at the Yale Arbovirus Research Unit where researchers were investigating the Lassa virus, he did not work in the actual facility where the virus was present, and he had no known contact with the virus. After his death, forty-one hospital personnel who had been in contact with him and seven family members were put under intense surveillance for two weeks in Pennsylvania, and in Puerto Rico where he was buried, but all managed to escape the infection. Casals confirmed that Ramon had succumbed to Lassa Fever. This chilling information caused the group investigating the live virus to stop their investigation, and all samples were sent to a maximum security laboratory at the Center for Disease Control (CDC).


Biosafety

Although Casals and his coworkers recognized the dangerous nature of Lassa virus, and had implemented special safety protocols, Casals contracted Lassa fever in June 1969 nevertheless, and nearly died from it. A few months later, technician Juan Roman became ill and died, even though he never worked directly in the laboratory or dealt with the virus. It was never determined how the two of them contracted the virus, although one theory was dust kicked up by lab mice. The chilling effect of this caused the laboratory to halt work on the virus, and transfer the samples to the CDC maximum-security lab. According to Dr. Gregory Tignor, a retired Yale professor who worked with Dr. Casals, "It took great courage to work with viruses in those days because every worker knew that his or her life was in danger." The events at the Yale laboratory had a major impact in the handling of dangerous viruses. Yale biological safety officer Ben Fontes gave credit to the "extremely careful" protocols Casals had designed for preventing a more serious outbreak, and said that "The incident forced changes to biosafety nationally, and was one of the seminal events in ringing about modernbiosafety. Following the incidents at the Yale lab and other labs nationally, a classification system was developed to label the danger level of handling different viruses or other biological agents. As a result, pathogens like Lassa and unidentified new ones were sent to the most secure facilities.


Viral taxonomy

Casals helped identify and classify a thousand viruses. Lassa is one of many he discovered. He is considered an authority on
viral taxonomy Virus classification is the process of naming viruses and placing them into a Alpha taxonomy, taxonomic system similar to the classification systems used for cell (biology), cellular organisms. Viruses are classified by phenotypic characteristics, ...
because of his landmark classification of pathogenic viruses, especially mosquito- and other insect-borne viruses, among which is the
Zika virus ''Zika virus'' (ZIKV; pronounced or ) is a member of the virus family ''Flaviviridae''. It is spread by daytime-active ''Aedes'' mosquitoes, such as '' A. aegypti'' and '' A. albopictus''. Its name comes from the Ziika Forest of Uganda, whe ...
. He also was the first to establish the fact that some viruses that cause infections in the same organ, such as polio, encephalitis, or rabies viruses in the central nervous system, are not from the same family but belong to different families.


Awards

* Richard M Taylor Award, given by the American Committee on Arthropod-Borne Viruses. * Kimble Methodology Award, from the American Public Health Association.


Personal life

Casals had polio as a child, and as a result walked with a limp in adulthood. He was married to Ellen Casals.


See also

*
Biohazard A biological hazard, or biohazard, is a biological substance that poses a threat to the health of living organisms, primarily humans. This could include a sample of a microorganism, virus or toxin that can adversely affect human health. A bioh ...
*
Biocontainment One use of the concept of biocontainment is related to laboratory biosafety and pertains to microbiology laboratories in which the physical containment of pathogenic organisms or agents (bacteria, viruses, and toxins) is required, usually by is ...
* Biosafety level * Lassa fever * Lassa virus *
Public health Public health is "the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations, public and private, communities and individuals". Analyzing the det ...
*
Virology Virology is the Scientific method, scientific study of biological viruses. It is a subfield of microbiology that focuses on their detection, structure, classification and evolution, their methods of infection and exploitation of host (biology), ...


Sources

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References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Casals i Ariet, Jordi 1911 births 2004 deaths Spanish epidemiologists People from Osona Physicians from Catalonia American virologists Spanish emigrants to the United States Yale University faculty Cornell University faculty 20th-century Spanish physicians