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Epidemic typhus

Epidemic typhus, also known as louse-borne typhus, is a form of typhus so named because the disease often causes epidemics following wars and natural disasters where civil life is disrupted.[4][5] Epidemic typhus is spread to people through contact with infected body lice, in contrast to endemic typhus which is usually transmitted by fleas.[4][5]

Typhus
Other namesCamp fever, jail fever, hospital fever, ship fever, famine fever, putrid fever, petechial fever, epidemic louse-borne typhus,[1] louse-borne typhus[2]
Rash caused by epidemic typhus[3]
SpecialtyInfectious diseases 

Though typhus has been responsible for millions of deaths throughout history, it is still considered a rare disease that occurs mainly in populations that suffer unhygienic extreme overcrowding.[6] Typhus is most rare in industrialized countries. It occurs primarily in the colder, mountainous regions of central and east Africa, as well as Central and South America.[7] The causative organism is Rickettsia prowazekii, transmitted by the human body louse (Pediculus humanus corporis).[8][9] Untreated typhus cases have a fatality rate of approximately 40%.[7]

Epidemic typhus should not be confused with murine typhus, which more endemic to the United States, particularly Southern California and Texas. This form of typhus has similar symptoms but is caused by Rickettsia typhi, is less deadly, and has different vectors for transmission.[10]

Signs and symptoms

Symptoms of this disease typically begin within 2 weeks of contact with the causative organism. Signs/Symptoms may include:[6]

  • Fever
  • Chills
  • Headache
  • Confusion
  • Cough
  • Rapid Breathing
  • Body/Muscle Aches
  • Rash
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting

After 5–6 days, a macular skin eruption develops: first on the upper trunk and spreading to the rest of the body (rarely to the face, palms, or soles of the feet, however).[6]

Brill–Zinsser disease, first described by Nathan Brill in 1913 at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, is a mild form of epidemic typhus that recurs in someone after a long period of latency (similar to the relationship between chickenpox and shingles). This recurrence often arises in times of relative immunosuppression, which is often in the context of a person suffering malnutrition or other illnesses. In combination with poor sanitation and hygiene in times of social chaos and upheaval, which enable a greater density of lice, this reactivation is why typhus generates epidemics in such conditions.[citation needed]

Complications

Complications are as follows[citation needed]

Transmission

Feeding on a human who carries the bacterium infects the louse. R. prowazekii grows in the louse's gut and is excreted in its feces. The louse transmits the disease by biting an uninfected human, who scratches the louse bite (which itches) and rubs the feces into the wound.[11] The incubation period is one to two weeks. R. prowazekii can remain viable and virulent in the dried louse feces for many days. Typhus will eventually kill the louse, though the disease will remain viable for many weeks in the dead louse.[11]

Epidemic typhus has historically occurred during times of war and deprivation. For example, typhus killed millions of prisoners in German Nazi concentration camps during World War II. The unhygenic conditions in camps such as Auschwitz, Theresienstadt, and Bergen-Belsen allowed diseases such as typhus to flourish. Situations in the twenty-first century with potential for a typhus epidemic would include refugee camps during a major famine or natural disaster. In the periods between outbreaks, when human to human transmission occurs less often, the flying squirrel serves as a zoonotic reservoir for the Rickettsia prowazekii bacterium.

In 1916, Henrique da Rocha Lima proved that the bacterium Rickettsia prowazekii was the agent responsible for typhus; he named it after H. T. Ricketts and Stanislaus von Prowazek, two zoologists who had died from typhus while investigating epidemics. Once these crucial facts were recognized, Rudolf Weigl in 1930 was able to fashion a practical and effective vaccine production method.[12] He ground up the insides of infected lice that had been drinking blood. It was, however, very dangerous to produce, and carried a high likelihood of infection to those who were working on it.

A safer mass-production-ready method using egg yolks was developed by Herald R. Cox in 1938.[13] This vaccine was widely available and used extensively by 1943.

Diagnosis

IFA, ELISA or PCR positive after 10 days.[citation needed]

Treatment

The infection is treated with antibiotics. Intravenous fluids and oxygen may be needed to stabilize the patient. There is a significant disparity between the untreated mortality and treated mortality rates: 10-60% untreated versus close to 0% treated with antibiotics within 8 days of initial infection. Tetracycline, chloramphenicol, and doxycycline[14] are commonly used. Infection can also be prevented by vaccination.[citation needed]

Some of the simplest methods of prevention and treatment focus on preventing infestation of body lice. Completely changing the clothing, washing the infested clothing in hot water, and in some cases also treating recently used bedsheets all help to prevent typhus by removing potentially infected lice. Clothes left unworn and unwashed for 7 days also result in the death of both lice and their eggs, as they have no access to a human host.[15] Another form of lice prevention requires dusting infested clothing with a powder consisting of 10% DDT, 1% malathion, or 1% permethrin, which kill lice and their eggs.[14]

Other preventive measures for individuals are to avoid unhygienic, extremely overcrowded areas where the causative organisms can jump from person to person. In addition, they are warned to keep a distance from larger rodents that carry lice, such as rats, squirrels, or opossums.[14]

History

History of outbreaks

Before 19th century

During the second year of the Peloponnesian War (430 BC), the city-state of Athens in ancient Greece had an epidemic, known as the Plague of Athens, which killed, among others, Pericles and his two elder sons. The plague returned twice more, in 429 BC and in the winter of 427/6 BC. Epidemic typhus is proposed as a strong candidate for the cause of this disease outbreak, supported by both medical and scholarly opinions.[16][17]

 
Rash caused by epidemic typhus in Burundi

The first description of typhus was probably given in 1083 at La Cava abbey near Salerno, Italy.[18][19] In 1546, Girolamo Fracastoro, a Florentine physician, described typhus in his famous treatise on viruses and contagion, De Contagione et Contagiosis Morbis.[20]

Typhus was carried to mainland Europe by soldiers who had been fighting on Cyprus. The first reliable description of the disease appears during the siege of the Emirate of Granada by the Catholic Monarchs in 1489 during the Granada War. These accounts include descriptions of fever and red spots over arms, back and chest, progressing to delirium, gangrenous sores, and the stench of rotting flesh. During the siege, the Catholics lost 3,000 men to enemy action, but an additional 17,000 died of typhus.[citation needed]

Typhus was also common in prisons (and in crowded conditions where lice spread easily), where it was known as Gaol fever or Jail fever. Gaol fever often occurs when prisoners are frequently huddled together in dark, filthy rooms. Imprisonment until the next term of court was often equivalent to a death sentence. Typhus was so infectious that prisoners brought before the court sometimes infected the court itself. Following the Black Assize of Oxford 1577, over 300 died from epidemic typhus, including Speaker Robert Bell, Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer. The outbreak that followed, between 1577 and 1579, killed about 10% of the English population.[citation needed]

During the Lent assize held at Taunton (1730), typhus caused the death of the Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer, the High Sheriff of Somerset, the sergeant, and hundreds of other persons. During a time when there were 241 capital offences, more prisoners died from 'gaol fever' than were put to death by all the public executioners in the realm. In 1759 an English authority estimated that each year a quarter of the prisoners had died from gaol fever.[21] In London, typhus frequently broke out among the ill-kept prisoners of Newgate Gaol and moved into the general city population.[citation needed]

19th century

Epidemics occurred in the British Isles and throughout Europe, for instance, during the English Civil War, the Thirty Years' War, and the Napoleonic Wars. Many historians believe that the typhus outbreak among Napoleon's troops is the real reason why he stalled his military campaign into Russia, rather than starvation or the cold.[22] A major epidemic occurred in Ireland between 1816 and 1819, and again in the late 1830s. Another major typhus epidemic occurred during the Great Irish Famine between 1846 and 1849. The Irish typhus spread to England, where it was sometimes called "Irish fever" and was noted for its virulence. It killed people of all social classes since lice were endemic and inescapable, but it hit particularly hard in the lower or "unwashed" social strata. It was carried to North America by the many Irish refugees who fled the famine. In Canada, the 1847 North American typhus epidemic killed more than 20,000 people, mainly Irish immigrants in fever sheds and other forms of quarantine, who had contracted the disease aboard coffin ships.[23] As many as 900,000 deaths have been attributed to the typhus fever during the Crimean War in 1853–1856,[22] and 270,000 to the 1868 Finnish typhus epidemic.[24]

In the United States, a typhus epidemic struck Philadelphia in 1837. The son of Franklin Pierce died in 1843 of a typhus epidemic in Concord, New Hampshire. Several epidemics occurred in Baltimore, Memphis, and Washington, D.C. between 1865 and 1873. Typhus fever was also a significant killer during the American Civil War, although typhoid fever was the more prevalent cause of US Civil War "camp fever." Typhoid is a completely different disease from typhus. Typically more men died on both sides of disease than wounds.[citation needed]

Rudolph Carl Virchow, a physician, anthropologist, and historian attempted to control an outbreak of typhus in Upper Silesia and wrote a 190-page report about it. He concluded that the solution to the outbreak did not lie in individual treatment or by providing small changes in housing, food or clothing, but rather in widespread structural changes to directly address the issue of poverty. Virchow's experience in Upper Silesia led to his observation that "Medicine is a social science". His report led to changes in German public health policy.[citation needed]

20th century

Typhus was endemic in Poland and several neighboring countries prior to World War I (1914–1918).[25][26] During and shortly after the war, epidemic typhus caused up to three million deaths in Russia, and several million citizens also died in Poland and Romania.[27][28] Since 1914, many troops, prisoners and even doctors were infected, and at least 150,000 died from typhus in Serbia, 50,000 of whom were prisoners.[29][30][31] Delousing stations were established for troops on the Western Front, but the disease ravaged the armies of the Eastern Front. Fatalities were generally between 10 and 40 percent of those infected, and the disease was a major cause of death for those nursing the sick. During World War I and the Russian Civil War between the White and Red, the typhus epidemic caused 2–3 million deaths out of 20–30 million cases in Russia between 1918 and 1922.[27]

 
A U.S. soldier demonstrating DDT-hand spraying equipment. DDT was used to control the spread of typhus-carrying lice during WWII.

Typhus caused hundreds of thousands of deaths during World War II.[32] It struck the German Army during Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of Russia, in 1941.[13] In 1942 and 1943 typhus hit French North Africa, Egypt and Iran particularly hard.[11] Typhus epidemics killed inmates in the Nazi concentration camps and death camps such as Auschwitz, Dachau, Theresienstadt, and Bergen-Belsen.[13] Footage shot at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp shows the mass graves for typhus victims.[13] Anne Frank, at age 15, and her sister Margot both died of typhus in the camps. Even larger epidemics in the post-war chaos of Europe were averted only by the widespread use of the newly discovered DDT to kill lice on the millions of refugees and displaced persons.[citation needed]

Following the development of a vaccine during World War II, Western Europe and North America have been able to prevent epidemics. These have usually occurred in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and parts of Africa, particularly Ethiopia. Naval Medical Research Unit Five worked there with the government on research to attempt to eradicate the disease.[citation needed]

In one of its first major outbreaks since World War II, epidemic typhus reemerged in 1995 in a jail in N'Gozi, Burundi. This outbreak followed the start of the Burundian Civil War in 1993, which caused the displacement of 760,000 people. Refugee camps were crowded and unsanitary, and often far from towns and medical services.[33]

21st century

A 2005 study found seroprevalence of R. prowazekii antibodies in homeless populations in two shelters in Marseille, France. The study noted the "hallmarks of epidemic typhus and relapsing fever".[34]

History of vaccines

Major developments for typhus vaccines started during World War I, as typhus caused high mortality, and threatened the health and readiness for soldiers on the battlefield.[35] Vaccines for typhus, like other vaccines of the time, were classified as either living or killed vaccines.[35] Live vaccines were typically an injection of live agent, and killed vaccines are live cultures of an agent that are chemically inactivated prior to use.[35]

Attempts to create a living vaccine of classical, louse-borne, typhus were attempted by French researchers but these proved unsuccessful.[35] Researchers turned to murine typhus to develop a live vaccine.[35] At the time, murine vaccine was viewed as a less severe alternative to classical typhus. Four versions of a live vaccine cultivated from murine typhus were tested, on a large scale, in 1934.[35]

While the French were making advancements with live vaccines, other European countries were working to develop killed vaccines.[35] During World War II, there were three kinds of potentially useful killed vaccines.[35] All three killed vaccines relied on the cultivation of Rickettsia prowazekii, the organism responsible for typhus.[35] The first attempt at a killed vaccine was developed by Germany, using the Rickettsia prowazekii found in louse feces.[35] The vaccine was tested extensively in Poland between the two world wars and used by the Germans for their troops during their attacks on the Soviet Union.[35]

A second method of growing Rickettsia prowazekii was discovered using the yolk sac of chick embryos. Germans tried several times to use this technique of growing Rickettsia prowazekii but no effort was pushed very far.[35]

The last technique was an extended development of the previously known method of growing murine typhus in rodents.[35] It was discovered that rabbits could be infected, by a similar process, and contract classical typhus instead of murine typhus.[35] Again, while proven to produce suitable Rickettsia prowazekii for vaccine development, this method was not used to produce wartime vaccines.[35]

During WWII, the two major vaccines available were the killed vaccine grown in lice and the live vaccine from France.[35] Neither was used much during the war.[35] The killed, louse-grown vaccine was difficult to manufacture in large enough quantities, and the French vaccine was not believed to be safe enough for use.[35]

The Germans worked to develop their own live vaccine from the urine of typhus victims.[35] While developing a live vaccine, Germany used live Rickettsia prowazekii to test multiple possible vaccines' capabilities.[35] They gave live Rickettsia prowazekii to concentration camp prisoners, using them as a control group for the vaccine tests.[35]

The use of DDT as an effective means of killing lice, the main carrier of typhus, was discovered in Naples.[35]

Society and culture

Biological weapon

Typhus was one of more than a dozen agents that the United States researched as potential biological weapons before President Richard Nixon suspended all non-defensive aspects of the U.S. biological weapons program in 1969.[36]

Poverty and displacement

The CDC lists the following areas as active foci of human epidemic typhus: Andean regions of South America, some parts of Africa; on the other hand, the CDC only recognizes an active enzootic cycle in the United States involving flying squirrels (CDC). Though epidemic typhus is commonly thought to be restricted to areas of the developing world, serological examination of homeless persons in Houston found evidence for exposure to the bacterial pathogens that cause epidemic typhus and murine typhus. A study involving 930 homeless people in Marseille, France, found high rates of seroprevalence to R. prowazekii and a high prevalence of louse-borne infections in the homeless.[citation needed]

Typhus has been increasingly discovered in homeless populations in developed nations. Typhus among homeless populations is especially prevalent as these populations tend to migrate across states and countries, spreading the risk of infection with their movement. The same risk applies to refugees, who travel across country lines, often living in close proximity and unable to maintain necessary hygienic standards to avoid being at risk for catching lice possibly infected with typhus.[citation needed]

Because the typhus-infected lice live in clothing, the prevalence of typhus is also affected by weather, humidity, poverty and lack of hygiene. Lice, and therefore typhus, are more prevalent during colder months, especially winter and early spring. In these seasons, people tend to wear multiple layers of clothing, giving lice more places to go unnoticed by their hosts. This is particularly a problem for poverty-stricken populations as they often do not have multiple sets of clothing, preventing them from practicing good hygiene habits that could prevent louse infestation.[15]

Due to fear of an outbreak of epidemic typhus, the US Government put a typhus quarantine in place in 1917 across the entirety of the US-Mexican border. Sanitation plants were constructed that required immigrants to be thoroughly inspected and bathed before crossing the border. Those who routinely crossed back and forth across the border for work were required to go through the sanitation process weekly, updating their quarantine card with the date of the next week's sanitation. These sanitation border stations remained active over the next two decades, regardless of the disappearance of the typhus threat. This fear of typhus and resulting quarantine and sanitation protocols dramatically hardened the border between the US and Mexico, fostering scientific and popular prejudices against Mexicans. This ultimately intensified racial tensions and fueled efforts to ban immigrants to the US from the Southern Hemisphere because the immigrants were associated with the disease.[37]

Literature

See also

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  1. ^ "Epidemic Typhus Associated with Flying Squirrels -- United States". www.cdc.gov. Retrieved 2022-02-07.

epidemic, typhus, also, known, louse, borne, typhus, form, typhus, named, because, disease, often, causes, epidemics, following, wars, natural, disasters, where, civil, life, disrupted, spread, people, through, contact, with, infected, body, lice, contrast, en. Epidemic typhus also known as louse borne typhus is a form of typhus so named because the disease often causes epidemics following wars and natural disasters where civil life is disrupted 4 5 Epidemic typhus is spread to people through contact with infected body lice in contrast to endemic typhus which is usually transmitted by fleas 4 5 TyphusOther namesCamp fever jail fever hospital fever ship fever famine fever putrid fever petechial fever epidemic louse borne typhus 1 louse borne typhus 2 Rash caused by epidemic typhus 3 SpecialtyInfectious diseases Though typhus has been responsible for millions of deaths throughout history it is still considered a rare disease that occurs mainly in populations that suffer unhygienic extreme overcrowding 6 Typhus is most rare in industrialized countries It occurs primarily in the colder mountainous regions of central and east Africa as well as Central and South America 7 The causative organism is Rickettsia prowazekii transmitted by the human body louse Pediculus humanus corporis 8 9 Untreated typhus cases have a fatality rate of approximately 40 7 Epidemic typhus should not be confused with murine typhus which more endemic to the United States particularly Southern California and Texas This form of typhus has similar symptoms but is caused by Rickettsia typhi is less deadly and has different vectors for transmission 10 Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 1 1 Complications 2 Transmission 3 Diagnosis 4 Treatment 5 History 5 1 History of outbreaks 5 1 1 Before 19th century 5 1 2 19th century 5 1 3 20th century 5 1 4 21st century 5 2 History of vaccines 6 Society and culture 6 1 Biological weapon 6 2 Poverty and displacement 6 3 Literature 7 See also 8 ReferencesSigns and symptoms EditSymptoms of this disease typically begin within 2 weeks of contact with the causative organism Signs Symptoms may include 6 Fever Chills Headache Confusion Cough Rapid Breathing Body Muscle Aches Rash Nausea VomitingAfter 5 6 days a macular skin eruption develops first on the upper trunk and spreading to the rest of the body rarely to the face palms or soles of the feet however 6 Brill Zinsser disease first described by Nathan Brill in 1913 at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City is a mild form of epidemic typhus that recurs in someone after a long period of latency similar to the relationship between chickenpox and shingles This recurrence often arises in times of relative immunosuppression which is often in the context of a person suffering malnutrition or other illnesses In combination with poor sanitation and hygiene in times of social chaos and upheaval which enable a greater density of lice this reactivation is why typhus generates epidemics in such conditions citation needed Complications Edit Complications are as follows citation needed Myocarditis Endocarditis Mycotic aneurysm Pneumonia Pancreatitis Kidney or bladder infections Acute renal failure Meningitis Encephalitis Myelitis Septic shockTransmission EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Feeding on a human who carries the bacterium infects the louse R prowazekii grows in the louse s gut and is excreted in its feces The louse transmits the disease by biting an uninfected human who scratches the louse bite which itches and rubs the feces into the wound 11 The incubation period is one to two weeks R prowazekii can remain viable and virulent in the dried louse feces for many days Typhus will eventually kill the louse though the disease will remain viable for many weeks in the dead louse 11 Epidemic typhus has historically occurred during times of war and deprivation For example typhus killed millions of prisoners in German Nazi concentration camps during World War II The unhygenic conditions in camps such as Auschwitz Theresienstadt and Bergen Belsen allowed diseases such as typhus to flourish Situations in the twenty first century with potential for a typhus epidemic would include refugee camps during a major famine or natural disaster In the periods between outbreaks when human to human transmission occurs less often the flying squirrel serves as a zoonotic reservoir for the Rickettsia prowazekii bacterium In 1916 Henrique da Rocha Lima proved that the bacterium Rickettsia prowazekii was the agent responsible for typhus he named it after H T Ricketts and Stanislaus von Prowazek two zoologists who had died from typhus while investigating epidemics Once these crucial facts were recognized Rudolf Weigl in 1930 was able to fashion a practical and effective vaccine production method 12 He ground up the insides of infected lice that had been drinking blood It was however very dangerous to produce and carried a high likelihood of infection to those who were working on it A safer mass production ready method using egg yolks was developed by Herald R Cox in 1938 13 This vaccine was widely available and used extensively by 1943 Diagnosis EditIFA ELISA or PCR positive after 10 days citation needed Treatment EditThe infection is treated with antibiotics Intravenous fluids and oxygen may be needed to stabilize the patient There is a significant disparity between the untreated mortality and treated mortality rates 10 60 untreated versus close to 0 treated with antibiotics within 8 days of initial infection Tetracycline chloramphenicol and doxycycline 14 are commonly used Infection can also be prevented by vaccination citation needed Some of the simplest methods of prevention and treatment focus on preventing infestation of body lice Completely changing the clothing washing the infested clothing in hot water and in some cases also treating recently used bedsheets all help to prevent typhus by removing potentially infected lice Clothes left unworn and unwashed for 7 days also result in the death of both lice and their eggs as they have no access to a human host 15 Another form of lice prevention requires dusting infested clothing with a powder consisting of 10 DDT 1 malathion or 1 permethrin which kill lice and their eggs 14 Other preventive measures for individuals are to avoid unhygienic extremely overcrowded areas where the causative organisms can jump from person to person In addition they are warned to keep a distance from larger rodents that carry lice such as rats squirrels or opossums 14 History EditHistory of outbreaks Edit Before 19th century Edit During the second year of the Peloponnesian War 430 BC the city state of Athens in ancient Greece had an epidemic known as the Plague of Athens which killed among others Pericles and his two elder sons The plague returned twice more in 429 BC and in the winter of 427 6 BC Epidemic typhus is proposed as a strong candidate for the cause of this disease outbreak supported by both medical and scholarly opinions 16 17 Rash caused by epidemic typhus in Burundi The first description of typhus was probably given in 1083 at La Cava abbey near Salerno Italy 18 19 In 1546 Girolamo Fracastoro a Florentine physician described typhus in his famous treatise on viruses and contagion De Contagione et Contagiosis Morbis 20 Typhus was carried to mainland Europe by soldiers who had been fighting on Cyprus The first reliable description of the disease appears during the siege of the Emirate of Granada by the Catholic Monarchs in 1489 during the Granada War These accounts include descriptions of fever and red spots over arms back and chest progressing to delirium gangrenous sores and the stench of rotting flesh During the siege the Catholics lost 3 000 men to enemy action but an additional 17 000 died of typhus citation needed Typhus was also common in prisons and in crowded conditions where lice spread easily where it was known as Gaol fever or Jail fever Gaol fever often occurs when prisoners are frequently huddled together in dark filthy rooms Imprisonment until the next term of court was often equivalent to a death sentence Typhus was so infectious that prisoners brought before the court sometimes infected the court itself Following the Black Assize of Oxford 1577 over 300 died from epidemic typhus including Speaker Robert Bell Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer The outbreak that followed between 1577 and 1579 killed about 10 of the English population citation needed During the Lent assize held at Taunton 1730 typhus caused the death of the Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer the High Sheriff of Somerset the sergeant and hundreds of other persons During a time when there were 241 capital offences more prisoners died from gaol fever than were put to death by all the public executioners in the realm In 1759 an English authority estimated that each year a quarter of the prisoners had died from gaol fever 21 In London typhus frequently broke out among the ill kept prisoners of Newgate Gaol and moved into the general city population citation needed 19th century Edit Epidemics occurred in the British Isles and throughout Europe for instance during the English Civil War the Thirty Years War and the Napoleonic Wars Many historians believe that the typhus outbreak among Napoleon s troops is the real reason why he stalled his military campaign into Russia rather than starvation or the cold 22 A major epidemic occurred in Ireland between 1816 and 1819 and again in the late 1830s Another major typhus epidemic occurred during the Great Irish Famine between 1846 and 1849 The Irish typhus spread to England where it was sometimes called Irish fever and was noted for its virulence It killed people of all social classes since lice were endemic and inescapable but it hit particularly hard in the lower or unwashed social strata It was carried to North America by the many Irish refugees who fled the famine In Canada the 1847 North American typhus epidemic killed more than 20 000 people mainly Irish immigrants in fever sheds and other forms of quarantine who had contracted the disease aboard coffin ships 23 As many as 900 000 deaths have been attributed to the typhus fever during the Crimean War in 1853 1856 22 and 270 000 to the 1868 Finnish typhus epidemic 24 In the United States a typhus epidemic struck Philadelphia in 1837 The son of Franklin Pierce died in 1843 of a typhus epidemic in Concord New Hampshire Several epidemics occurred in Baltimore Memphis and Washington D C between 1865 and 1873 Typhus fever was also a significant killer during the American Civil War although typhoid fever was the more prevalent cause of US Civil War camp fever Typhoid is a completely different disease from typhus Typically more men died on both sides of disease than wounds citation needed Rudolph Carl Virchow a physician anthropologist and historian attempted to control an outbreak of typhus in Upper Silesia and wrote a 190 page report about it He concluded that the solution to the outbreak did not lie in individual treatment or by providing small changes in housing food or clothing but rather in widespread structural changes to directly address the issue of poverty Virchow s experience in Upper Silesia led to his observation that Medicine is a social science His report led to changes in German public health policy citation needed 20th century Edit Typhus was endemic in Poland and several neighboring countries prior to World War I 1914 1918 25 26 During and shortly after the war epidemic typhus caused up to three million deaths in Russia and several million citizens also died in Poland and Romania 27 28 Since 1914 many troops prisoners and even doctors were infected and at least 150 000 died from typhus in Serbia 50 000 of whom were prisoners 29 30 31 Delousing stations were established for troops on the Western Front but the disease ravaged the armies of the Eastern Front Fatalities were generally between 10 and 40 percent of those infected and the disease was a major cause of death for those nursing the sick During World War I and the Russian Civil War between the White and Red the typhus epidemic caused 2 3 million deaths out of 20 30 million cases in Russia between 1918 and 1922 27 A U S soldier demonstrating DDT hand spraying equipment DDT was used to control the spread of typhus carrying lice during WWII Typhus caused hundreds of thousands of deaths during World War II 32 It struck the German Army during Operation Barbarossa the invasion of Russia in 1941 13 In 1942 and 1943 typhus hit French North Africa Egypt and Iran particularly hard 11 Typhus epidemics killed inmates in the Nazi concentration camps and death camps such as Auschwitz Dachau Theresienstadt and Bergen Belsen 13 Footage shot at Bergen Belsen concentration camp shows the mass graves for typhus victims 13 Anne Frank at age 15 and her sister Margot both died of typhus in the camps Even larger epidemics in the post war chaos of Europe were averted only by the widespread use of the newly discovered DDT to kill lice on the millions of refugees and displaced persons citation needed Following the development of a vaccine during World War II Western Europe and North America have been able to prevent epidemics These have usually occurred in Eastern Europe the Middle East and parts of Africa particularly Ethiopia Naval Medical Research Unit Five worked there with the government on research to attempt to eradicate the disease citation needed In one of its first major outbreaks since World War II epidemic typhus reemerged in 1995 in a jail in N Gozi Burundi This outbreak followed the start of the Burundian Civil War in 1993 which caused the displacement of 760 000 people Refugee camps were crowded and unsanitary and often far from towns and medical services 33 21st century Edit A 2005 study found seroprevalence of R prowazekii antibodies in homeless populations in two shelters in Marseille France The study noted the hallmarks of epidemic typhus and relapsing fever 34 History of vaccines Edit Major developments for typhus vaccines started during World War I as typhus caused high mortality and threatened the health and readiness for soldiers on the battlefield 35 Vaccines for typhus like other vaccines of the time were classified as either living or killed vaccines 35 Live vaccines were typically an injection of live agent and killed vaccines are live cultures of an agent that are chemically inactivated prior to use 35 Attempts to create a living vaccine of classical louse borne typhus were attempted by French researchers but these proved unsuccessful 35 Researchers turned to murine typhus to develop a live vaccine 35 At the time murine vaccine was viewed as a less severe alternative to classical typhus Four versions of a live vaccine cultivated from murine typhus were tested on a large scale in 1934 35 While the French were making advancements with live vaccines other European countries were working to develop killed vaccines 35 During World War II there were three kinds of potentially useful killed vaccines 35 All three killed vaccines relied on the cultivation of Rickettsia prowazekii the organism responsible for typhus 35 The first attempt at a killed vaccine was developed by Germany using the Rickettsia prowazekii found in louse feces 35 The vaccine was tested extensively in Poland between the two world wars and used by the Germans for their troops during their attacks on the Soviet Union 35 A second method of growing Rickettsia prowazekii was discovered using the yolk sac of chick embryos Germans tried several times to use this technique of growing Rickettsia prowazekii but no effort was pushed very far 35 The last technique was an extended development of the previously known method of growing murine typhus in rodents 35 It was discovered that rabbits could be infected by a similar process and contract classical typhus instead of murine typhus 35 Again while proven to produce suitable Rickettsia prowazekii for vaccine development this method was not used to produce wartime vaccines 35 During WWII the two major vaccines available were the killed vaccine grown in lice and the live vaccine from France 35 Neither was used much during the war 35 The killed louse grown vaccine was difficult to manufacture in large enough quantities and the French vaccine was not believed to be safe enough for use 35 The Germans worked to develop their own live vaccine from the urine of typhus victims 35 While developing a live vaccine Germany used live Rickettsia prowazekii to test multiple possible vaccines capabilities 35 They gave live Rickettsia prowazekii to concentration camp prisoners using them as a control group for the vaccine tests 35 The use of DDT as an effective means of killing lice the main carrier of typhus was discovered in Naples 35 Society and culture EditBiological weapon Edit Typhus was one of more than a dozen agents that the United States researched as potential biological weapons before President Richard Nixon suspended all non defensive aspects of the U S biological weapons program in 1969 36 Poverty and displacement Edit The CDC lists the following areas as active foci of human epidemic typhus Andean regions of South America some parts of Africa on the other hand the CDC only recognizes an active enzootic cycle in the United States involving flying squirrels CDC Though epidemic typhus is commonly thought to be restricted to areas of the developing world serological examination of homeless persons in Houston found evidence for exposure to the bacterial pathogens that cause epidemic typhus and murine typhus A study involving 930 homeless people in Marseille France found high rates of seroprevalence to R prowazekii and a high prevalence of louse borne infections in the homeless citation needed Typhus has been increasingly discovered in homeless populations in developed nations Typhus among homeless populations is especially prevalent as these populations tend to migrate across states and countries spreading the risk of infection with their movement The same risk applies to refugees who travel across country lines often living in close proximity and unable to maintain necessary hygienic standards to avoid being at risk for catching lice possibly infected with typhus citation needed Because the typhus infected lice live in clothing the prevalence of typhus is also affected by weather humidity poverty and lack of hygiene Lice and therefore typhus are more prevalent during colder months especially winter and early spring In these seasons people tend to wear multiple layers of clothing giving lice more places to go unnoticed by their hosts This is particularly a problem for poverty stricken populations as they often do not have multiple sets of clothing preventing them from practicing good hygiene habits that could prevent louse infestation 15 Due to fear of an outbreak of epidemic typhus the US Government put a typhus quarantine in place in 1917 across the entirety of the US Mexican border Sanitation plants were constructed that required immigrants to be thoroughly inspected and bathed before crossing the border Those who routinely crossed back and forth across the border for work were required to go through the sanitation process weekly updating their quarantine card with the date of the next week s sanitation These sanitation border stations remained active over the next two decades regardless of the disappearance of the typhus threat This fear of typhus and resulting quarantine and sanitation protocols dramatically hardened the border between the US and Mexico fostering scientific and popular prejudices against Mexicans This ultimately intensified racial tensions and fueled efforts to ban immigrants to the US from the Southern Hemisphere because the immigrants were associated with the disease 37 Literature Edit 1847 In Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte an outbreak of typhus occurs in Jane s school Lowood highlighting the unsanitary conditions the girls live in 38 39 1862 In Fathers and Sons by Ivan Turgenev Evgeny Bazarov dissects a local peasant and dies after contracting typhus 40 1886 In the short story Excellent People by Anton Chekhov typhus kills a Russian provincial 41 1886 In The Strange Adventures of Captain Dangerous by George Augustus Henry Sala We Convicts were all had to the Grate for the Knight and Alderman would not venture further in for fear of the Gaol Fever citation needed 1890 In How the Other Half Lives by Jacob Riis the effects of typhus fever and smallpox on Jewtown are described 42 43 1935 Hans Zinsser s Rats Lice and History although a touch outdated on the science contains many useful cross references to classical and historical impact of typhus citation needed 1940 in The Don Flows Home to the Sea by Mikhail Sholokhov numerous characters contract typhus during the Russian Civil War citation needed 1946 In Viktor Frankl s Man s Search for Meaning Frankl a Nazi concentration camp prisoner and trained psychiatrist treats fellow prisoners for delirium due to typhus while being occascionally affected with the disease himself 44 1955 In Vladimir Nabokov s Lolita Humbert Humbert s childhood sweetheart Annabel Leigh dies of typhus 45 1956 In Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak the main character contracts epidemic typhus in the winter following the Russian Revolution while living in Moscow 46 1964 In Nacht novel by Edgar Hilsenrath characters imprisoned in a ghetto in Transnistria during World War II are portrayed infected with and dying of epidemic typhus 47 1978 In Patrick O Brian s novel Desolation Island an outbreak of gaol fever strikes the crew while sailing aboard the Leopard 48 1980 1991 In Maus by Art Spiegelman Vladek Spiegelman contracts typhus during his imprisonment at the Dachau concentration camp 49 50 1982 There is a typhus epidemic in Chile graphically described in The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende 51 1996 In Andrea Barrett s novella Ship Fever the characters struggle with a typhus outbreak at the Canadian Grosse Isle Quarantine Station during 1847 52 53 2001 Lynn and Gilbert Morris novel Where Two Seas Met portrays an outbreak of typhus on the island of Bequia in the Grenadines in 1869 citation needed 2004 In Neal Stephenson s The System Of The World a fictionalized Sir Isaac Newton dies of gaol fever before being resurrected by Daniel Waterhouse citation needed See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Epidemic Typhus Globalization and disease List of epidemics Weil Felix testReferences Edit Rapini Ronald P Bolognia Jean L Jorizzo Joseph L 2007 Dermatology 2 Volume Set St Louis Mosby p 1130 ISBN 978 1 4160 2999 1 Diseases P T at sedgleymanor com Retrieved 2007 07 17 Jochmann Georg 26 December 2017 Lehrbuch der Infektionskrankheiten fur Arzte und studierende Berlin J Springer via Internet Archive a b Epidemic typhus Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2020 11 13 Retrieved 2021 02 27 a b Li Li Li Guiying 2015 Epidemic and Endemic Typhus In Li Hongjun ed Radiology of Infectious Diseases Volume 2 Springer Dordrecht pp 89 94 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 9876 1 8 ISBN 978 94 017 9875 4 a b c Epidemic Typhus Typhus Fevers CDC www cdc gov 2020 11 13 Retrieved 2020 12 10 a b WHO Typhus fever Epidemic louse borne typhus WHO Archived from the original on December 26 2012 Retrieved 2020 11 06 Gray MW November 1998 Rickettsia typhus and the mitochondrial connection Nature 396 6707 109 10 Bibcode 1998Natur 396 109G doi 10 1038 24030 PMID 9823885 S2CID 5477013 Andersson JO Andersson SG March 2000 A century of typhus lice and Rickettsia Res Microbiol 151 2 143 50 doi 10 1016 s0923 2508 00 00116 9 PMID 10865960 Health Adam 8 October 2019 Typhus Healthing ca Retrieved 2020 12 10 a b c Zarafonetis Chris J D Internal Medicine in World War II Volume II Chapter 7 Weigl s method of intrarectal inoculation of lice in production of typhus vaccine and experimental works with Rickettsia Prowazeki a b c d Nuremberg Military Tribunal Vol I pp 508 511 Archived from the original on 2007 07 01 a b c Brouqui Philippe 2011 01 01 Arthropod Borne Diseases Associated with Political and Social Disorder Annual Review of Entomology 56 1 357 374 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 120709 144739 PMID 20822446 a b Raoult Didier Roux Veronique 1999 08 15 The Body Louse as a Vector of Reemerging Human Diseases Clinical Infectious Diseases 29 4 888 911 doi 10 1086 520454 ISSN 1058 4838 PMID 10589908 At a January 1999 medical conference at the University of Maryland Dr David Durack consulting professor of medicine at Duke University notes Epidemic typhus fever is the best explanation It hits hardest in times of war and privation it has about 20 percent mortality it kills the victim after about seven days and it sometimes causes a striking complication gangrene of the tips of the fingers and toes The Plague of Athens had all these features see also umm edu Gomme A W 1981 Volume 5 Book VIII In Andrewes A Dover K J eds An Historical Commentary on Thucydides Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 814198 3 Szybalski Waclaw 1999 Maintenance of human fed live lice in the laboratory and production of Weigl s exanthematous typhus vaccine Carugo Beppe 2006 Breve Storia della Medicina della Diagnostica delle Arti Sanitarie PDF 2nd ed Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 05 Retrieved 2013 10 02 Fracastoro Girolamo 1546 De Contagione et Contagiosis Morbis apud heredes Lucantonii Iuntae Ralph D Smith Comment Criminal Law Arrest The Right to Resist Unlawful Arrest 7 Nat Resources J 119 122 n 16 1967 hereinafter Comment citing John Howard The State of Prisons 6 7 1929 Howard s observations are from 1773 to 1775 Copied from State v Valentine May 1997 132 Wn 2d 1 935 P 2d 1294 a b Typhus Biological Weapons www globalsecurity org Retrieved 2020 10 09 The government inspector s office McCord Museum Montreal M993X 5 1529 1 Retrieved 22 January 2012 Ulla Piela Loitsut 1800 luvun Pohjois Karjalassa Kalevalaseuran vuosikirja 68 1989 82 107 p 82 Health Disease Mortality Demographic Effects International Encyclopedia of the First World War WW1 encyclopedia 1914 1918 online net Retrieved 2021 02 26 Goodall E W April 23 1920 Typhus Fever in Poland 1916 to 1919 Section of Epidemiology and State Medicine 13 Sect Epidemiol State Med 261 276 doi 10 1177 003591572001301507 PMC 2152684 PMID 19981289 a b Patterson KD 1993 Typhus and its control in Russia 1870 1940 Med Hist 37 4 361 381 378 doi 10 1017 s0025727300058725 PMC 1036775 PMID 8246643 Typhus War and Vaccines History of Vaccines Retrieved 2021 02 26 Pennington Hugh 2019 01 10 The impact of infectious disease in war time a look back at WW1 Future Microbiology 14 3 165 168 doi 10 2217 fmb 2018 0323 ISSN 1746 0913 PMID 30628481 Typhus in World War I Microbiology Society Retrieved 2021 02 26 SOUBBOTITCH V November 30 1917 A Pandemic of Typhus in Serbia in 1914 and 1915 Section of Epidemiology and State Medicine 11 31 39 doi 10 1177 003591571801101302 S2CID 42043208 Zinsser Hans 1996 1935 Rats Lice and History A Chronicle of Pestilence and Plagues New York Black Dog amp Leventhal ISBN 978 1 884822 47 6 Raoult D Ndihokubwayo JB Tissot Dupont H Roux V Faugere B Abegbinni R Birtles RJ 1998 08 01 Outbreak of epidemic typhus associated with trench fever in Burundi The Lancet 352 9125 353 358 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 97 12433 3 ISSN 0140 6736 PMID 9717922 S2CID 25814472 Brouqui Philippe Stein Andreas Dupont Herve Tissot Gallian Pierre Badiaga Sekene Rolain Jean Marc Mege Jean Louis Scola Bernard La Berbis Philippe 2005 Ectoparasitism and Vector Borne Diseases in 930 Homeless People From Marseilles Medicine 84 1 61 68 doi 10 1097 01 md 0000152373 07500 6e PMID 15643300 S2CID 24934110 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Lindenmann Jean 2002 Typhus Vaccine Developments from the First to the Second World War On Paul Weindling s Between Bacteriology and Virology History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn Napoli 24 3 4 467 485 doi 10 1080 03919710210001714513 PMID 15045834 via JSTOR Chemical and Biological Weapons Possession and Programs Past and Present Middlebury College James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies 9 April 2002 Archived from the original on 2 October 2001 Retrieved 2008 11 14 Stern Alexandra Minna 2005 Eugenic Nation Faults and Frontier of Better Breeding in Modern America ProQuest ebrary University of California Press ISBN 9780520285064 Roberts Jack 2002 Was It Really Typhus Bronte Studies 27 1 49 53 doi 10 1179 bst 2002 27 1 49 S2CID 161282182 Sorkin Amy Davidson 2020 The Fever Room Epidemics and Social Distancing in Bleak House and Jane Eyre The New Yorker Patterson K David 1993 Typhus and its control in Russia 1870 1940 Medical History 37 4 361 381 doi 10 1017 S0025727300058725 PMC 1036775 PMID 8246643 Coulehan Jack 2003 Comments on Chekhov s Doctors Chekhov s Doctors A Collection of Chekhov s Medical Tales By Chekhov Anton Pavlovich Coulehan Jack ed Kent Ohio Kent State University Press p 185 ISBN 0 87338 780 5 Markel Howard 1999 The City Responds to the Threat of Typhus Quarantine East European Jewish Immigrants and the New York City Epidemics of 1892 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press p 48 ISBN 0 8018 6180 2 Nelkin Dorothy Gilman Sander L 1991 Placing Blame for Devastating Disease In Mack Arien ed In Time of Plague The History and Social Consequences of Lethal Epidemic Disease New York New York University Press p 44 ISBN 0 8147 5485 6 Pytell T E 2003 Redeeming the Unredeemable Auschwitz and Man s Search for Meaning Holocaust and Genocide Studies 17 1 94 95 doi 10 1093 hgs 17 1 89 Project MUSE 43137 Schweighauser Philipp 1999 Discursive Killings Intertextuality Aestheticization and Death in Nabokov s Lolita Amerikastudien American Studies 44 2 255 267 JSTOR 41157458 Mossman Elliott 1989 Toward a Poetics of the Novel Doctor Zhivago The Fourth Typhus In Fleishman Lazar ed Boris Pasternak and His Times Selected Papers from the Second International Symposium on Pasternak Berkeley Berkeley Slavic Specialties pp 386 397 ISBN 0 933884 56 7 Stenberg Peter 1982 Memories of the Holocaust Edgar Hilsenrath and the Fiction of Genocide Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift fur Literaturwissenschaft und Geistesgeschichte 56 2 277 289 doi 10 1007 BF03375427 S2CID 151862296 West Louis Jolyon 1994 The Medical World of Dr Stephen Maturin In Cunningham A E ed Patrick O Brian Critical Essays and a Bibliography New York W W Norton pp 100 101 ISBN 0 393 03626 X Smith Philip 2016 Historiography and Survival in Maus Reading Art Spiegelman Routledge Advances in Comics Studies New York Routledge p 57 doi 10 4324 9781315665542 9 ISBN 9781315665542 McGlothlin Erin 2003 No Time like the Present Narrative and Time in Art Spiegelman s Maus Narrative 11 2 197 doi 10 1353 nar 2003 0007 JSTOR 20107309 S2CID 146408018 Jackson Mary Garland 1994 A Psychological Portrait of Three Female Characters in La casa de los espiritus Letras Femeninas 20 1 2 59 70 JSTOR 23022635 Dale Corinne H 2000 Those Filthy Irish Dis ease in Andrea Barrett s Short Story Ship Fever Journal of the Short Story in English 35 99 108 Livingston Katherine 1996 Also Noteworthy Ship Fever and Other Stories Science 274 5292 1478 doi 10 1126 science 274 5292 1478a 55 Alice S Chapman 2006 Cluster of Sylvatic Epidemic Typhus Cases Associated with Flying Squirrels 2004 2006 MedscapeCME Epidemic Typhus Associated with Flying Squirrels United States 1 Epidemic Typhus Associated with Flying Squirrels United States www cdc gov Retrieved 2022 02 07 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Epidemic typhus amp oldid 1138825369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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