قراءة كتاب Plague Its Cause and the Manner of its Extension—Its Menace—Its Control and Suppression—Its Diagnosis and Treatment

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Plague
Its Cause and the Manner of its Extension—Its Menace—Its
Control and Suppression—Its Diagnosis and Treatment

Plague Its Cause and the Manner of its Extension—Its Menace—Its Control and Suppression—Its Diagnosis and Treatment

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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describe certain cases as ambulant, abortive, larval and fulminant. In the rat the evidences of plague are less striking in life than they are at the post-mortem table. Indeed plague-stricken rats, either naturally or artificially (experimentally) infected, often show very slight evidences of disease before death. Chronic plague in rats and a relative immunity to inoculation in certain wild rats are fairly well recognized phenomena.

Flea Conveyance of Plague Bacilli.—Both male and female fleas convey plague, but the exact method of carrying the plague bacilli from diseased rats to man, while fairly well determined, is of such recent decision as to leave room for further experimentation. At present it is believed that the flea deposits plague bacilli, at the time of biting, upon the skin, by ejecting the contents of its rectum and by regurgitation of its stomach contents. At least the flea is known to perform these acts at the time of biting, and the rubbing or scratching of the flea bite with the hand may easily introduce the bacilli into the skin at this spot.[1]

[1] Acknowledgment is hereby made to the Contributors to "The Rat and Its Relation to Public Health" by various authors, prepared by direction of the Surgeon-General, P. H. and M. H. S., for numerous facts utilized in the preparation of this article. The particular contributors whose valuable chapters have been drawn upon for information are D. E. Lantz, C. W. McCoy, D. H. Currie, Carrol Fox, Rupert Blue, W. C. Rucker, R. H. Creel, M. J. Rosenau, V. C. Heiser, W. C. Hobdy, and J. W. Kerr.

The possibility that the flea introduces the plague bacilli upon his mandibles, or the skin-piercing armament with which he is provided, is also to be considered. However, the following facts support the first proposition. It has been experimentally shown that the average capacity of a flea's stomach is about one-half of a cubic millimetre and that thousands of plague bacilli may be ingested by the flea during the biting of a plague-diseased rat; that the plague bacilli multiply enormously and for many days in the flea's stomach and that the bacilli are found only in the insect's digestive tract; that plague bacilli are regurgitated from the stomach and are voided from the rectum with the digested blood.

It has also been proved that almost all varieties of rat fleas, under favorable circumstances, will bite man and that the most common human flea (Pulex irritans) is frequently found upon rats, the flea, generally speaking, being much less particular in his choice of hosts and in his permanence of residence than most insects and ectoparasites in general.

Of the rat fleas, Pulex pallidus (Lœmopsylla cheopis) is common under various names in India, the Philippines, Australia, Italy, Brazil and in tropical countries generally. It bites both rat and man. Ceratophyllus fasciatus, the common rat flea of Great Britain and the United States, also bites both rat and man. In North America and elsewhere certain other fleas of the genus Ceratophyllus have been found upon ground squirrels, cats, rats, sparrows and in chicken yards.

Dog fleas and cat fleas (genus Ctenocephalus) also infest rats, and fleas of other genera are found upon mice, rats and ground squirrels rather indiscriminately.

The significance of these facts in connection with prevention of plague is apparent and it is plain that our warfare against fleas must be made upon all fleas and not upon a single variety. In this connection the possibilities of the conveyance of plague bacilli by other suctorial parasites and by insects which are not parasites, must be borne in mind.

Thus the bed-bug, the louse, the tick and the mosquito must be suspected as possible intermediaries and the fly and the cockroach as possible food contaminators. Indeed, laboratory experiments have already incriminated bed-bugs, flies and lice as potential vectors of plague bacilli.

Experiment and observation have demonstrated, however, that above all other parasites and insects, the flea is most likely to convey the plague germ from rat to man, by reason of his frequent excursions from rat-host to human-host, his taste for blood from either host, his enormous activity and his ability to jump. After a searching inquiry into the plague question the Indian Plague Commission came to the conclusion that contagion plays a very minor part in the spread of the disease, less than three per cent of human cases being so acquired.

This commission also decided that infection is conveyed from rat to rat and from rat to man solely through the agency of fleas. While these conclusions are probably true—and therefore of the utmost importance from the standpoint of practical prevention—I should question whether the other possibilities, however remote, are entirely negligible.

Seasonal conditions may affect the course of an epidemic in various ways. (a) By effect upon flea prevalence, cold weather greatly lessening the number of insects. (b) By effect upon rats, cold weather and rains either driving them from overground to underground, or vice versa, or from their principal avenues of travel in cities (the sewers), into houses and buildings. (c) By effect upon the plague germ, Bacillus pestis. The resistance of this organism is very variable, sunlight and drying being its greatest enemies, while darkness and dampness are its chief allies. So far as temperature is concerned, the plague bacillus is not likely to be seriously affected by natural temperatures, as it is not destroyed by heat below 150 degrees Fahrenheit, nor by cold measured by zero Fahrenheit, which means that it survives freezing, generally speaking.

It is probable that the periods of greatest seasonal prevalence of plague will be found to correspond generally with increased prevalence of rat fleas. During the periods when rat fleas are absent or least prevalent, the disease is perpetuated in the form of chronic (subacute) rat plague in a small number of the rodents. The India Plague Commission made and verified this observation.

Cholera epidemics often abate spontaneously and this is believed to be due in part to attenuations of virulence and changes in the cholera organism which may be demonstrated in the laboratory. We can hardly hope for such spontaneous abatements in plague epidemics, as it has been found difficult to attenuate or to intensify cultures of plague bacilli permanently in laboratory experiments with animals. If it is true that plague epidemics are often marked by a preponderance of mild cases in the early days and a gradual subsidence of intensity of the cases as the epidemics wane, we probably will have to look to the susceptibility of our patients for our explanation of this phenomenon, rather than to variations in the virulence of the plague bacilli. If plague bacilli continue to be distributed to susceptible people the disease should continue with a general stability of virulence.

Stability of Virulence of B. Pestis.—According to Strong, stability of virulence is a marked characteristic of B. pestis, it having

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