The plague started by bacteria. Rodents such as rats, would carry the disease. Humans got infected by rat fleas when they would bite humans. In rare times, someone could get infected by handling an infected animal. The plague originated in China but was carried to the Crimean Port by ship. Because of the black death, a death toll happened. ⅓ or 60% of the population died because of the different types of plagues. Someone could die as soon as they got infected or weeks later. If someone had the Bubonic plague, they could die in 1 week or if someone had the Septicemic plague, they could die in 3 days. But, if someone had the Pneumonic plague, they could die in 1 day. A lot of people get confused by A plague and THE plague. A plague is a sickness, …show more content…
The first type was Bubonic. Someone could get the Bubonic plague by getting bitten by an infected flea. It was an infection of lymph nodes. The symptoms of this plague were: fever, headache, chills, and swolleness. If someone got the Bubonic plague, they could locate it in the groin, armpit, or neck. It was about the size of a chicken egg and was tender and warm to the touch. Whoever got this plague would live up to a week of being infected, then they would die. The second type of plague was Septicemic. This occurs when plague bacteria multiply in your bloodstream. The symptoms for this pague were: fever, chills, abdominal pain, diarrhea, vomiting, shock, and bleeding from mouth, nose, or under the infected person’s skin. This type of plague was deadly if not treated with antibiotics and someone would die after 3 days of no treatment. This type of plague was found in the bloodstream. The third type of plague was Pneumonic plague. The Pneumonic plague was least common but most dangerous. This type of plague affected the lungs. That is why the Pneumonic plague was most dangerous. Someone would know if they had this plague by these symptoms: cough with bloody sputum, difficulty breathing, high fever, nausea and vomiting, and weakness. The chances of the victim living after getting this plague were not good. After someone was infected, they would die 1 day
The black death was caused by bacterial strains, lived in the stomach of certain fleas which live in the fur of rodents. There were three types of the plague bubonic, pneumonic, and septicemic. The most common was bubonic. The person would develop bumps filled with pus this
The Black Death was a bubonic and pneumonic disease.Bubonic symptoms included bleeding and Black spots appearing all over the body.The major symptoms were swelling of lymph glands,called buboes in the pelvic area,armpits,and the neck.( crf staff S1)Victims have a high fever,usually they bleed under the skin,which make black splotches all over the body(S1 crf staff )Pneumonic symptoms included coughing and vomiting blood,The second variation of the plague is pneumonic,in this the bacteria strikes the
I was observing the spread of the plague right before my eyes. I knew how the three types of plague were transmitted but the humans did not. The three types were the Bubonic, Pneumonic and Septicemic plague. The Bubonic plague was the most common plague in medieval Europe. It was transmitted by infected fleas that were carried by rats, when the rat died the flea would jump to a human to feed from their blood. The human bitten by the flea, was then infected and faced certain death, the flea would then find a new human to feed off. The Pneumonic plague, being the second most common type in medieval Europe, was far more deadly and contagious than the Bubonic plague. The Plague would attack a human's respiratory system and was spread through the air by a victim's cough. The last type of plague was the Septicemic, it was the rarest and deadliest form of the Black Death. The Septicemic plague was also spread by fleas, like the Bubonic plague, but moved directly to a human's
What is the plague? The plague or referred to as the Black Death, according to the CDC (2015), “is a disease that affects humans and other mammals and caused by the Yersinia pestis bacteria. Humans usually get plague after being bitten by a rodent flea that is carrying the plague bacterium or by handling an animal infected with plague”. There are three categories of a plague. There is the bubonic plague, which is the most common form. With this form bacteria infects the lymph system and causes it to become inflamed. Symptoms of this type of plague are fever, headache, chills, and swollen and tender lymph nodes, which are called buboes. Then there is the Septicemic, which occurs when the bacteria multiply in the blood. Symptoms of this type of plague are fever, chills, extreme weakness, abdominal pain, shock, and possibly bleeding into the skin and other organs. Also, skin and other tissues may turn black and die, especially fingers, toes and the nose (CDC, 2015). Then there is the Pneumonic Plague, which is the most serious form of plague and occurs when Y. pestis bacteria infect the lungs and cause pneumonia (NIH, 2015). This is the only form of the plague that can be transmitted human to human. Symptoms of this form of the plague are ever, headache, weakness, and a rapidly
The Black Death consisted mainly of Bubonic plague, but pneumonic plague was also present in the epidemic. Symptoms of the Bubonic plague included high fever, aching limbs, and blood vomiting. Most characteristic of the disease were swollen lymph nodes, which grew until they
The most common one was the Bubonic Variant type of plague because it was inflected by fleas that attached themselves to rats and then to humans. Its symptoms were swellings or buboes that appeared on the victims neck, armpits or groin. People with this kind of plague live up to a week. One of the other types of plague is Pneumonic plague which wasn’t that common would but if you did get it you would die in a day or two because if it got to your bloodstream you would die. It spread by merely breathing the exhaled air of a victim. The last type of plague is the Septicemic plague. The Septicemic plague would attack your bloodstream and you would bleed out. For the Septicemic plague there was no definite
The most common symptom of this disease was the occurrence of tumors around the groin, armpits, and neck. When opened, these tumors oozed and bled. The tumors would soon be followed by fever and the vomiting of blood. Victims would usually die between two to seven days after catching the disease. After dying, the armies would collect the bodies and throw them over the walls of the city. Other symptoms of the plague was a lung condition, which caused difficulty breathing, horrible infections to the respiratory system, and coughing up
It was a type of plague that was spread via the bite of infected rat fleas. The initial cause of the plague was diseased rats, with the bacteria Yersinia pestis, in their bloodstream as seen in source 1. Fleas lived on rats and when a flea bit the infected rat, the bacteria would enter the fleas stomach and multiply as seen in source 1. Due to the sudden decrease in the rat population (from disease), many fleas needed a better source of food, so they jumped onto people and bit them. This in turn is how people caught the plague. In the 1320’s a great famine broke out in china, and this caused many rats to die, also resulting in the quick spread of the plague. The name black death came from the swollen buboes (glands) in the victim’s neck, arm pit, and inner thigh that turned black as they filled with blood. Victims often died within 12 hours to 7 days of being bitten. Due to lack of hygiene and living in close, dirty and crowded proximity, rats were very common, making the disease easily contagious. The black death was a combination of three different streams of plague – bubonic, pneumonic and septicaemic. The bubonic plague was the most common form of the plague and was caused by infected fleas biting people. As seen in source 2, sufferers would have large lumps covering their body, as well as have a fever or headache. Soon after the victim would have slurred speech and vomit blood. Pneumonic was deadly
During the plague a lot of people died. In Source B, it states, the plague spread fast because of trade. The plague went all over the place because when people were trading some people had the plague and then gave it to the people they were trading with. Once someone got it, they would get very sick. The first thing that would happen is they will get a very bad fever. Next, they would start coughing very badly. Then, they would start bleeding in the inside of their body's. After that, the blood will start going on the outside of their body's. Sooner or later they would die. In agreement
The Plague that struck Europe and Asia in the 14th century was probably the most devastating disease or natural disaster the world ever faced. The Bubonic Plague or Black Death killed an estimated 25 million people from 1347 to 1352 in Europe which accounted for one third of Europe’s population.??-1 It is believed to have started in Asia and then spread to Europe. The Bubonic Plague was not just limited to this period in time. It would reappear through the centuries including the Great Plague of London around 1656 in which 20% of London residents died from it.??-2 Although some of the latter breakouts of the plague were also catastrophic, this paper will primarily focus on the plague from the 1300s. More specifically, this paper will
The most common one was Bubonic, it also killed the most people. If you had this your symptoms were chills, high fever, delirium, vomiting, and rapid heartbeat. You would develop inflamed swellings that had pus also known as “Bubose”. Fifty to eighty percent of people that had the plague died within three to six days. Pneumonic was less
In the lymphatic system, the lymph nodes acts as filters, catching substances harmful to the body, like toxins, bacteria, cancer cells, and viruses. The plague directly targeted this form of defense. The plague has three forms of infection, based on how the bacteria were transmitted to the individual. These forms are bubonic, septicaemic and pneumonic. The Bubonic form was the most common, especially during the 14th century; this form of the plague came directly from flea bites. With the Bubonic plague, the bacteria travel to the lymph nodes where it begins to multiply. The lymph node begins to become inflamed. The swollen lymph nodes are called “buboes”. The swollen nodes soon begin to cause sores, and if left untreated, the Bubonic plague can turn into the septicaemic form. The septicaemic form is a result of the Y. pestis entering the bloodstream. Since the bacteria are overwhelming the lymph nodes, and causing them to swell, the immune system is compromised. Individuals with the septicaemic form of the plague suffer with a high fever and eventually die of multiple organ failure. The last and most fatal form of the plague is the pneumonic plague. When infected with the pneumonic plague, the individuals develop a cough due to high levels of mucus buildup in the lungs, about 99% of those who contract this form die. Although the disease is fatal if left untreated, there is
2. The main symptoms of the Bubonic Plague was headaches, chills, high temperature, tiredness, nausea, pain, then it affects the neck and sides of the neck. These swelled up into large bumps called the "buboes".
The bubonic plague has been around for almost two thousand years. In most early cases the plague was spread from China along the Silk Road. The Silk Road was the over land trade route from the orient that silk, spices, and other trade able goods from the east to western Europe. In most cases rats carrying the Oriental Rat Flea or another animal carrying the flea would move to a new location. Once that animal died the flea would move to another host which could be a human. Once bitten by the flea a bubo begins to form when the bubo begins to ooze fluid the illness can then be passed through touch. As stated above in the Middle
There are three types of plague disease and each one of them has different symptoms. The first type of plague disease, the most popular type of disease, called Bubonic plague. According to Patient Care & Health Information in Mayo Clinic, its symptoms start to appear with less than 10 days after someone got bitten by an infected flea. The symptoms start with buboes, swollen lymph nodes, appear in some places in the body like neck, groin, or armpit. Also, buboes’ size is almost like a chicken egg size. A headache, muscle ache, chills and fever are the other sings of this type of disease (2015). The other type of plague disease is a result of plague bacteria multiplies in the blood which known as Septicemic plague. According to CDC, shock,