Why is typhus called jail fever?

In historical times, "jail fever" or "gaol fever" was common in English prisons, and is believed by modern authorities to have been typhus. It often occurred when prisoners were crowded together into dark, filthy rooms where lice spread easily.
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What was jail fever?

Endemic typhus is sometimes called "jail fever." The bacteria that cause this type of typhus is usually spread from rats to fleas to humans. Murine typhus occurs in the southern United States, particularly California and Texas. It is often seen during the summer and fall. It is rarely deadly.
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Does typhus still exist?

Though epidemic typhus was responsible for millions of deaths in previous centuries, it is now considered a rare disease. Occasionally, cases continue to occur, in areas where extreme overcrowding is common and body lice can travel from one person to another.
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What is typhus fever caused by?

Typhus fevers are a group of diseases caused by bacteria that are spread to humans by fleas, lice, and chiggers. Typhus fevers include scrub typhus, murine typhus, and epidemic typhus. Chiggers spread scrub typhus, fleas spread murine typhus, and body lice spread epidemic typhus.
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What is the difference between typhus and typhoid fever?

What's the Difference between Typhus and Typhoid Fever? Typhus fever is caused by the bacteria Rickettsia, which is transferred to humans through arthropods like lice, ticks, mites, or fleas. Typhoid fever is caused by the bacteria Salmonella typhi, which is related to the salmonella that causes food poisoning.
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Typhus



Can you get typhus twice?

If you wait too long to see a doctor, you may have to be hospitalized. Murine typhus is easily treated with certain antibiotics. Once you recover, you will not get it again.
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Is typhus the Black Plague?

Abstract. The plague of Athens raged for 4 years and resulted in the defeat of Athens. The cause of the plague of Athens continues to be debated. Infectious diseases most often cited as causes of the plague include influenza, epidemic typhus, typhoid fever, bubonic plague, smallpox, and measles.
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Where did typhus originally come from?

Typhus was endemic in Poland and several neighboring countries prior to World War I (1914–1918), but became epidemic during the war.
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How do you catch typhus?

You can catch typhus if you're bitten by infected lice, mites or fleas. These are often found on small animals like mice, rats, cats and squirrels. People can also carry them on their clothes, skin or hair.
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What does typhus do to the human body?

Endemic typhus symptoms can include rash that begins on the body trunk and spreads, high fever, nausea, malaise, diarrhea, and vomiting. Epidemic typhus has similar but more severe symptoms, including bleeding into the skin, delirium, hypotension, and death.
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Do lice carry typhus?

Disease is spread by human body lice infected with the bacteria that cause epidemic typhus fever. The disease is most common during the winter, when conditions favor person-to-person spread of body lice. Human body lice become infected when they feed on the blood of a person with epidemic typhus fever.
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Is there a cure for typhus?

Typhus Treatment

The most effective therapy for all three kinds of typhus is the antibiotic doxycycline. A single dose of doxycycline has proved effective against epidemic typhus. Doxycycline also works quickly on other strains of the disease.
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How did epidemic typhus stop?

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.
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Does typhus have a vaccine?

Typhus vaccines are vaccines developed to protect against typhus. As of 2020 they are not commercially available. One typhus vaccine consisted of formaldehyde-inactivated Rickettsia prowazekii. Two doses were injected subcutaneously four weeks apart.
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How many people died of typhus in concentration camps?

In November 1940, the Nazis walled more than 400,000 Jewish people inside a 3.4-square-kilometre ghetto in Warsaw, Poland. The overcrowded conditions, lack of sewage maintenance and inadequate food and hospital resources meant that typhus rapidly infected about 100,000 people and caused 25,000 deaths.
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Is typhus contagious from human to human?

Typhus is not transmitted from person to person like a cold or the flu. There are three different types of typhus, and each type is caused by a different type of bacterium and transmitted by a different type of arthropod.
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What does typhus rash look like?

The rash of murine typhus presents as fine erythematous papules on the abdomen, which spreads centripetally to the trunk and extremities but often spares the face, palms, and soles. Symptoms include abrupt onset of high fever, nausea, myalgia, arthralgia and headache.
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How do you prevent typhus?

Prevention
  1. There is no vaccine to prevent flea-borne typhus.
  2. Reduce your risk of getting flea-borne typhus by avoiding contact with fleas.
  3. Keep fleas off of your pets. ...
  4. Keep rodents and animals (e.g. opossums) away from your home, workplace, and recreational areas: ...
  5. Protect yourself from flea bites:
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What is scrub typhus?

Scrub typhus, also known as bush typhus, is a disease caused by a bacteria called Orientia tsutsugamushi. Scrub typhus is spread to people through bites of infected chiggers (larval mites). The most common symptoms of scrub typhus include fever, headache, body aches, and sometimes rash.
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What was the first epidemic of typhus?

Paleomicrobiology enabled the identification of the first outbreak of epidemic typhus in the 18th century in the context of a pan-European great war in the city of Douai, France, and supported the hypothesis that typhus was imported into Europe by Spanish soldiers returning from America.
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Is typhus spread by water?

People get typhoid from contact with a type of salmonella bacteria that are present in contaminated food and water. People may also contract typhoid from the feces of people and animals carrying the disease.
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What was 1916 fever?

' Trench fever was finally accepted as a clinical syndrome that occurred with enough consistency and frequency to justify its classification as a specific disease. Ultimate authority was lent to this view when the authorities moved to officially recognize the novel condition in the summer of 1916.
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What is the black plague called today?

Today, scientists understand that the Black Death, now known as the plague, is spread by a bacillus called Yersinia pestis.
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Is rickets a typhus?

Most notably, Rickettsia species are the pathogens responsible for typhus, rickettsialpox, boutonneuse fever, African tick-bite fever, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Flinders Island spotted fever, and Queensland tick typhus (Australian tick typhus).
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How did the Black Death End?

The most popular theory of how the plague ended is through the implementation of quarantines. The uninfected would typically remain in their homes and only leave when it was necessary, while those who could afford to do so would leave the more densely populated areas and live in greater isolation.
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