Abstract

Flea-borne typhus, due to Rickettsia typhi and Rickettsia felis, is an infection causing fever, headache, rash, hepatitis, thrombocytopenia, and diverse organ manifestations. Although most cases are self-limited, 26%–28% have complications and up to one-third require intensive care. Flea-borne typhus was recognized as an illness similar to epidemic typhus, but having a milder course, in the Southeastern United States and TX from 1913 into the 1920s. Kenneth Maxcy of the US Public Health Service (USPHS) first described the illness in detail and proposed a rodent reservoir and an arthropod vector. Other investigators of the USPHS (Eugene Dyer, Adolph Rumreich, Lucius Badger, Elmer Ceder, William Workman, and George Brigham) determined that the brown and black rats were reservoirs and various species of fleas, especially the Oriental rat flea, were the vectors. The disease was recognized as a health concern in the Southern United States in the 1920s and an increasing number of cases were observed in the 1930s and 1940s, with about 42,000 cases reported between 1931–1946. Attempts to control the disease in the 1930s by fumigation and rat proofing and extermination were unsuccessful. The dramatic increase in the number of cases from 1930 through 1944 was due to: the diversification of Southern agriculture away from cotton; the displacement of the smaller black rat by the larger brown rat in many areas; poor housing conditions during the Great Depression and World War II; and shortages of effective rodenticides and insecticides during World War II.

Highlights

  • Flea-borne typhus (FBT), known as murine typhus, is an infection caused by Rickettsia typhi and R. felis

  • It is instructive to review the history of the ascendency, decline, and resurgence of FBT in the United States because it exemplifies the influence of social conditions, public policy, and technology on the epidemiology of a vector-borne disease

  • The specific rat species is important to the epidemiology of FBT because the larger brown rat can harbor about four-times as many fleas as the black rat [59]

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Summary

Introduction

Flea-borne typhus (FBT), known as murine typhus, is an infection caused by Rickettsia typhi and R. felis. It is instructive to review the history of the ascendency, decline, and resurgence of FBT in the United States because it exemplifies the influence of social conditions, public policy, and technology on the epidemiology of a vector-borne disease. The opposite argument will be made for FBT in the United States; historical forces led to the social and economic conditions that promoted an epidemic of FBT in the Southern United States from 1930 to 1945, and fostered the technologies and social change that facilitated its control. This public health epic is divided into three parts.

Clinical Presentation of Flea-Borne Typhus
The Vectors of Murine Typhus
The Reservoirs
The Epidemiology and Ecology of Flea-Borne Typhus is Deduced
The Increasing Incidence of Flea-Borne Typhus and Initial Efforts at Control
Factors in the Rise of Flea-Borne Typhus in the United States 1913 to 1944
Findings
Conclusions
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