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‘Filth Diseases’ The term ‘Filth Diseases’ • We are used to thinking of infectious disease causing great human suffering, but there are some diseases that actually seem to thrive in conditions of filth and misery • The term ‘filth diseases’ has its origins in the 19th century when some physicians believed that filth itself was the cause of diseases • Although the discovery of microbes in the late 19th century displaced the ‘filth theory’ of diseases, it is still a useful term to identify some infectious diseases that lead to epidemics and pandemic • Seen in historical perspective, diseases like typhus and cholera thrive in conditions where human suffering is already at high point Typhus (Rickettsia prowazekii) • Rickettsia prowazekii is a bacterium that causes the epidemic typhus • Its main vector is human body lice; they become infected when they feed off an infected person; they then pass on the infection to other humans through their excrement which makes its way into the human body through their bite mark or some other opening in the skin • In most of the world humans are the reservoir of the bacterium • The pathogen probably originated in early civilizations, making the jump from animals to humans • Although it has been around for a long time, it is not really recoded much before the 15th century, likely because its symptoms (a high fever accompanied by a rash) can be confused with other diseases • Untreated, it can have a morbidity rate of up to 60 per cent of adult victims • Sufferers can be asymptomatic but still be able to infect lice Body louse with ingested blood meal The name typus • The term typhus was coined in the sixteenth century and was taken from the Greek word τύφος – meaning smoky or hazy – which reflects one of the main symptoms of the infection as it attacks the brain and causes delirium • The name reflects the humanist interest of sixteenth century physicians who read Greek • This also reflects the way in which diseases are socially constructed – until they have a name and some sort of epidemiology, they do not really get noticed, even though their existence on a biological level is ancient First recorded epidemic in 1489 • The first recorded epidemic of typhus occurred as a Spanish Army of 25,000 was laying siege to the Muslim stronghold of Granada • Sources cite the figure of 17,000 soldiers succumbing to the disease • Historians argue that the pathogen reached Spain with Spanish soldiers returning from the Crusades • From Spain the pathogen was transmitted to Italy with Spanish mercenary soldiers Siege of Naples 1528 • In 1528 a French army of about 28,000 was facing a much smaller Imperial army for control of Italy • Despite the greater strength of the French army, and outbreak of typhus devastated French forces, causing them to retreat • This was a significant victory from Charles V of Spain who was able to secure the title of Holy Roman Empire The Thirty Years War (1618-1648) • The Thirty Years’ War originated as a conflict between Catholic and Protestant states in Germany, but eventually grew through alliances to encompass all the great powers of Europe • The campaigns of this war are noted for their brutality, intensity, and for the suffering that warfare wrought on the civilian population • The greatest killer in these campaigns, especially before 1630, was typhus, which took millions of victims, soldiers and civilians alike • Many more people died as a result of disease than the actual battles, which raised the intensity of the stuggle Napoleon’s invasion of Russia 1812 • Although medical knowledge about typhus had increased by the 19th century, it had a devastating effect on Napoleon’s 600,000 man invasion force of Russia • Despite being warned by his medical advisors that his soldiers could not withstand the Russian winter, Napoleon went ahead • It is estimated that nearly half of his invading army was killed by typhus; starving through the Russian winter his soldiers descended upon the peasants in the countryside … likely this is where they encountered typhus which spread so quickly throughout his army Typhus and warfare • As these examples show, warfare created the perfect breeding ground for typhus • Because soldiers interact with the local civilians, and often seize their dwellings and goods, it increases their contact with infected lice • The cramped conditions, lack of food, sanitation, and generally dirty conditions make it a good breeding ground for lice • Because body lice were so common in the pre-modern period, people would have seen them as a nuisance, but would not have identified lice as a disease vector and would have seen them as relatively harmless Cholera • Like typhoid fever, cholera also comes from infected water supply contaminated by feces containing the bacterium • It originated in the Indian subcontinent centuries ago, and only started to spread widely into the rest of the world as a result of trade and empire starting in the seventeenth century • Since 1800 there have been seven cholera pandemics across the world, and has been responsible for millions of deaths across the globe Typhoid fever • The infectious disease typhus must not be confused with the separate infection typhoid fever • Although they have similar names, they have little in common, except for the fact that they both cause abdominal pain and fever • The pathogen causing it, Salmonella typhi, comes from contaminated food or water, and also can come from unwashed hands, thus a completely different vector • Another similarity is that a person can carry the the pathogen and pass it on The case of “Typhoid Mary” • The case of so-called “Typhoid Mary” is an instructive one for our study of disease because it shows the intersection of infectious disease, medical knowledge, public health precautions and the ramifications of enforcing public health measures • As you watch the documentary, think about how the issues raised by this case might have worked out in different parts of the world, with different infectious diseases, at different times • Also, the issues raised in the documentary will also set up the topic for next week’s lecture on the advances that have been made by modern science against infectious diseases