How did they prevent trench fever in ww1 Trench fever was also known as quintan fever and was caused by a bacterium called bartonella quintana found in body lice There is no evidence that bartonella species can be transmitted to people by ticks
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Transmission studies with ticks have only used mice and artificial feeding systems which do not demonstrate that a tick can spread bacteria to people or that the bacteria can survive in a tick for any length of time.
The discovery of a special antibody could help prevent dangerous bacterial infections such as trench fever, whose sufferers included celebrated authors like j
During the first world war, infection with b Quintana was referred to as trench fever due to the many cases among soldiers who lived in crowded trenches under poor hygienic conditions. It also gave us the term trench fever, the sudden onset of undulating fever, headache, and dizziness, caused by bartonella quintana infection, for which the principal vector is the human body louse. Trench foot is perfectly stoppable
You can stop it in its tracks, so to speak, by putting on dry socks and putting your feet somewhere that’s not in water However, that's impossible in 1914 on the western front, where you're in a ditch with no drainage. Effective treatments for trench fever include doxycycline, a tetracycline antibiotic, and ceftriaxone, a cephalosporin antibiotic