Black Death
Definition
Plague
is a serious, potentially life-threatening infectious disease that is
usually transmitted to humans by the bites of rodent fleas. It was one
of the scourges of early human history. There are three major forms of
the disease: bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic.
Description
Plague
has been responsible for three great world pandemics, which caused
millions of deaths and significantly altered the course of history. A
pandemic is a disease occurring in epidemic form throughout the entire
population of a country, a people, or the world. Although the cause of
the plague was not identified until the third pandemic in 1894,
scientists are virtually certain that the first two pandemics were
plague because a number of the survivors wrote about their experiences
and described the symptoms.
The first great
pandemic appeared in AD 542 and lasted for 60 years. It killed millions
of citizens, particularly people living along the Mediterranean Sea.
This sea was the busiest, coastal trade route at that time and connected
what is now southern Europe, northern Africa, and parts of coastal
Asia. This pandemic is sometimes referred to as the Plague of Justinian,
named for the great emperor of Byzantium who was ruling at the
beginning of the outbreak. According to the historian Procopius, this
outbreak of plague killed 10,000 people per day at its height just
within the city of Constantinople.
The second
pandemic occurred during the fourteenth century, and was called the
Black Death because its main symptom was the appearance of black patches
(caused by bleeding) on the skin. It was also a subject found in many
European paintings, drawings, plays, and writings of that time. The
connections between large active trading ports, rats coming off the
ships, and the severe outbreaks of the plague were understood by people
at the time. This was the most severe of the three, beginning in the
mid-1300s with an origin in central Asia and lasting for 400 years.
Between a fourth and a third of the entire European population died
within a few years after plague was first introduced. Some smaller
villages and towns were completely wiped out.
The
final pandemic began in northern China, reaching Canton and Hong Kong
by 1894. From there, it spread to all continents, killing millions.
The
great pandemics of the past occurred when wild rodents spread the
disease to rats in cities, and then to humans when the rats died.
Another route for infection came from rats coming off ships that had
traveled from heavily infected areas. Generally, these were busy coastal
or inland trade routes. Plague was introduced into the United States
during this pandemic and it spread from the West towards the Midwest and
became endemic in the Southwest of the United States.
About
10-15 Americans living in the southwestern United States contract
plague each year during the spring and summer. The last rat-borne
epidemic in the United States occurred in Los Angeles in 1924–25. Since
then, all plague cases in this country have been sporadic, acquired from
wild rodents or their fleas. Plague can also be acquired from ground
squirrels and prairie dogs in parts of Arizona, New Mexico, California,
Colorado, and Nevada. Around the world, there are between 1,000 and
2,000 cases of plague each year. Recent outbreaks in humans occurred in
Africa, South America, and Southeast Asia.
Some people and/or animals with bubonic plague go on to develop pneumonia (pneumonic plague). This can spread to others via infected droplets during coughing or sneezing.
Plague
is one of three diseases still subject to international health
regulations. These rules require that all confirmed cases be reported to
the World Health Organization (WHO) within 24 hours of diagnosis.
According to the regulations, passengers on an international voyage who
have been to an area where there is an epidemic of pneumonic plague must
be placed in isolation for six days before being allowed to leave.
While
plague is found in several countries, there is little risk to United
States travelers within endemic areas (limited locales where a disease
is known to be present) if they restrict their travel to urban areas
with modern hotel accommodations.
Over the past
few years, this infection primarily of antiquity has become a modern
issue. This change has occurred because of the concerns about the use of
plague as a weapon of biological warfare or terrorism (bioterrorism).
Along with anthrax and smallpox,
plague is considered to be a significant risk. In this scenario, the
primary manifestation is likely to be pneumonic plague transmitted by
clandestine aerosols. It has been reported that during World War II the
Japanese dropped "bombs" containing plague-infected fleas in China as a
form of biowarfare.
Causes and symptoms
Fleas carry the bacterium Yersinia pestis, formerly known as Pasteurella pestis.
The plague bacillus can be stained with Giemsa stain and typically
looks like a safety pin under the microscope. When a flea bites an
infected rodent, it swallows the plague bacteria. The bacteria are
passed on when the fleas, in turn, bite a human. Interestingly, the
plague bacterium grows in the gullet of the flea, obstructing it and not
allowing the flea to eat. Transmission occurs during abortive feeding
with regurgitation of bacteria into the feeding site. Humans also may
become infected if they have a break or cut in the skin and come in
direct contact with body fluids or tissues of infected animals.
More
than 100 species of fleas have been reported to be naturally infected
with plague; in the western United States, the most common source of
plague is the golden-manteled ground squirrel flea. Chipmunks and
prairie dogs have also been identified as hosts of infected fleas.
Since
1924, there have been no documented cases in the United States of
human-to-human spread of plague from droplets. All but one of the few
pneumonic cases have been associated with handling infected cats. While
dogs and cats can become infected, dogs rarely show signs of illness and
are not believed to spread disease to humans. However, plague has been
spread from infected coyotes (wild dogs) to humans. In parts of central
Asia, gerbils have been identified as the source of cases of bubonic
plague in humans.
Bubonic plague
Two to five days after infection, patients experience a sudden fever, chills, seizures, and severe headaches,
followed by the appearance of swellings or "buboes" in armpits, groin,
and neck. The most commonly affected sites are the lymph glands near the
site of the first infection. As the bacteria multiply in the glands,
the lymph node becomes swollen. As the nodes collect fluid, they become
extremely tender. Occasionally, the bacteria will cause an ulcer at the
point of the first infection.
Septicemic plague
Bacteria
that invade the bloodstream directly (without involving the lymph
nodes) cause septicemic plague. (Bubonic plague also can progress to
septicemic plague if not treated appropriately.) Septicemic plague that
does not involve the lymph glands is particularly dangerous because it
can be hard to diagnose the disease. The bacteria usually spread to
other sites, including the liver, kidneys, spleen, lungs, and sometimes
the eyes, or the lining of the brain. Symptoms include fever, chills,
prostration, abdominal pain, shock, and bleeding into the skin and organs.
Pneumonic plague
Pneumonic
plague may occur as a direct infection (primary) or as a result of
untreated bubonic or septicemic plague (secondary). Primary pneumonic
plague is caused by inhaling infective drops from another person or
animal with pneumonic plague. Symptoms, which appear within one to three
days after infection, include a severe, overwhelming pneumonia, with
shortness of breath, high fever, and blood in the phlegm. If untreated,
half the patients will die; if blood poisoning occurs as an early complication, patients may die even before the buboes appear.
Life-threatening complications of plague include shock, high fever, problems with blood clotting, and convulsions.
Diagnosis
Plague
should be suspected if there are painful buboes, fever, exhaustion, and
a history of possible exposure to rodents, rabbits, or fleas in the
West or Southwest. The patient should be isolated. Chest x rays are
taken, as well as blood cultures, antigen testing, and examination of
lymph node specimens. Blood cultures should be taken 30 minutes apart,
before treatment.
A group of German researchers
reported in 2004 on a standardized enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA) kit for the rapid diagnosis of plague. The test kit was
developed by the German military and has a high degree of accuracy as
well as speed in identifying the plague bacillus. The kit could be
useful in the event of a bioterrorist attack as well as in countries
without advanced microbiology laboratories.
Treatment
As
soon as plague is suspected, the patient should be isolated, and local
and state departments notified. Drug treatment reduces the risk of death
to less than 5%. The preferred treatment is streptomycin administered
as soon as possible. Alternatives include gentamicin, chloramphenicol,
tetracycline, or trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole.
Prognosis
Plague
can be treated successfully if it is caught early; the mortality rate
for treated disease is 1-15% but 40-60% in untreated cases. Untreated
pneumonic plague is almost always fatal, however, and the chances of
survival are very low unless specific antibiotic treatment is started
within 15-18 hours after symptoms appear. The presence of plague
bacteria in a blood smear is a grave sign and indicates septicemic
plague. Septicemic plague has a mortality rate of 40% in treated cases
and 100% in untreated cases.
Prevention
Anyone
who has come in contact with a plague pneumonia victim should be given
antibiotics, since untreated pneumonic plague patients can pass on their
illness to close contacts throughout the course of the illness. All
plague patients should be isolated for 48 hours after antibiotic
treatment begins. Pneumonic plague patients should be completely
isolated until sputum cultures show no sign of infection.
Residents
of areas where plague is found should keep rodents out of their homes.
Anyone working in a rodent-infested area should wear insect repellent on
skin and clothing. Pets can be treated with insecticidal dust and kept
indoors. Handling sick or dead animals (especially rodents and cats)
should be avoided.
Plague vaccines have been used with varying effectiveness since the late nineteenth century. Experts believe that vaccination
lowers the chance of infection and the severity of the disease.
However, the effectiveness of the vaccine against pneumonic plague is
not clearly known.
Vaccinations against plague
are not required to enter any country. Because immunization requires
multiple doses over a 6-10 month period, plague vaccine is not
recommended for quick protection during outbreaks. Moreover, its
unpleasant side effects make it a poor choice unless there is a
substantial long-term risk of infection. The safety of the vaccine for
those under age 18 has not been established. Pregnant women should not
be vaccinated unless the need for protection is greater than the risk to
the unborn child. Even those who receive the vaccine may not be
completely protected. The inadequacy of the vaccines available as of the
early 2000s explains why it is important to protect against rodents,
fleas, and people with plague. A team of researchers in the United
Kingdom reported in the summer of 2004 that an injected subunit vaccine
is likely to offer the best protection against both bubonic and
pneumonic forms of plague.
Key terms
Bioterrorism — The use of disease agents to terrorize or intimidate a civilian population.
Buboes
— Smooth, oval, reddened, and very painful swellings in the armpits,
groin, or neck that occur as a result of infection with the plague.
Endemic — A disease that occurs naturally in a geographic area or population group.
Epidemic — A disease that occurs throughout part of the population of a country.
Pandemic — A disease that occurs throughout a regional group, the population of a country, or the world.
Septicemia — The medical term for blood poisoning, in which bacteria have invaded the bloodstream and circulates throughout the body.
Resources
Books
Beers, Mark H., MD, and Robert Berkow, MD., editors. "Plague (Bubonic Plague; Pestis; Black Death)." In The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy. Whitehouse Station, NJ: Merck Research Laboratories, 2004.
Periodicals
Davis, S., M. Begon, L. DeBruyn, et al. "Predictive Thresholds for Plague in Kazakhstan." Science 304 (April 30, 2004): 736-738.
Gani, R., and S. Leach. "Epidemiologic Determinants for Modeling Pneumonic Plague Outbreaks." Emerging Infectious Diseases 10 (April 2004): 608-614.
Splettstoesser,
W. D., L. Rahalison, R. Grunow, et al. "Evaluation of a Standardized F1
Capsular Antigen Capture ELISA Test Kit for the Rapid Diagnosis of
Plague." FEMS Immunology and Medical Microbiology 41 (June 1, 2004): 149-155.
Titball, R. W., and E. D. Williamson. "Yersinia pestis (Plague) Vaccines." Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy 4 (June 2004): 965-973.
Velendzas, Demetres, MD, and Susan Dufel, MD. "Plague." eMedicine December 2, 2004. http://www.emedicine.com/EMERG/topic428.htm.
Organizations
Centers for Disease Control. 1600 Clifton Rd., NE, Atlanta, GA 30333. (800) 311-3435, (404) 639-3311. http://www.cdc.gov.
National
Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases, Division of
Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. Bldg. 31, Rm. 7A-50, 31 Center
Drive MSC 2520, Bethesda, MD 20892.
World
Health Organization. Division of Emerging and Other Communicable
Diseases Surveillance and Control. 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland.
Other
Bacterial Diseases (Healthtouch). 〈http://www.healthtouch.com/level1/leaflets/105825/105826.htm〉.
Bug Bytes. 〈http://www.isumc.edu/bugbytes/〉.
Centers for Disease Control. http://www.cdc.gov/travel/travel.html.
Infectious Diseases Weblink. 〈http://pages.prodigy.net/pdeziel/〉.
International Society of Travel Medicine. http://www.istm.org.
World Health Organization. http://www.who.ch/.
Citations:
For Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine:plague. (n.d.) Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine. (2008). Retrieved October 16 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/plagueFor Dorland's Medical Dictionary:plague. (n.d.) Dorland's Medical Dictionary for Health Consumers. (2007). Retrieved October 16 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/plagueFor The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary:plague. (n.d.) The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary. (2007). Retrieved October 16 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/plagueFor Mosby's Medical Dictionary:plague. (n.d.) Mosby's Medical Dictionary, 8th edition. (2009). Retrieved October 16 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/plagueFor Miller-Keane Encyclopedia:plague. (n.d.) Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. (2003). Retrieved October 16 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/plagueFor Dental Dictionary:plague. (n.d.) Mosby's Dental Dictionary, 2nd edition. (2008). Retrieved October 16 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/plagueFor Veterinary Dictionary:plague. (n.d.) Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary, 3 ed.. (2007). Retrieved October 16 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/plagueFor McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine:plague. (n.d.) McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. (2002). Retrieved October 16 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/plague |
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