Abstract

The main aims of this review were to understand the roles of evolutionary process in human disease. The suffering of human from disease may be millions years ago and until now are continuing and the human disease can be classified into many types based on their sources such as bacterial, Genetics and viral. For the past sixty years the scientist carried out high number of experiment to understand and the decision of the evolutionary process impact of the human disease. the main example of effect of evolution on the human health are using overuse of antibiotics against bacterial infection and the results to the speedy evolution of bacteria that are resistant to multiple antibiotics such that even vancomycin. The process of natural selection which is proposed by Charles Darwin play vital roles in Biological and medical process and also helps to predict and find the relationship between natural selection process of evolution and phenotypical traits. Understanding the developmental and genetic underpinnings of unique evolutionary changes have been hindered by way of insufficient databases of evolutionary anatomy and through the lack of a computational method to become aware of underlying candidate genes and regulators to the developing o the process of the evolution with helps of other branches of modern sciences such as genetics, Bioinformatics, epidemiology, ecology, microbiology, molecular biology and biochemistry.

Highlights

  • For tens of millions of years, human beings and their ancestors suffered from diseases -- each the variety prompted with the aid of infectious pathogens and the form precipitated through our own our bodies as they age and degenerate (Armelagos et al, 1996)

  • The latest extent in genomics statistics is revealing a sudden point of view of gene loss as a pervasive source of genetic variation that can purpose adaptive phenotypic diversity (Albalat and Cañestro 2016)

  • Comparative analysis across ethnically various human populations and across human and dehumanised primate species is vital for reconstructing human organic process history and for perception the genetic foundation of the human ailment (Tishkoff and Verrelli 2003)

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Summary

Introduction

For tens of millions of years, human beings and their ancestors suffered from diseases -- each the variety prompted with the aid of infectious pathogens (e.g., bacteria, viruses, parasites) and the form precipitated through our own our bodies as they age and degenerate (Armelagos et al, 1996). Keyword Gene conversion, Drug-resistant, Natural ecosystems, Evolution, Charles Darwin, Genetic variation.

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