How Charles Nicolle of the Pasteur Institute discovered that epidemic typhus is transmitted by lice: reminiscences from my years at the Pasteur Institute in Paris.
نویسنده
چکیده
Until the first decade of this century, our information about epidemic, i.e., exanthematic typhus was rather scarce. We knew only that there existed a very dangerous, easily communicable disease, which decimated populations during wars, hunger, or flood, spreading with great speed and affecting large numbers of people. After World War I, 20-30 million people died in Eastern Europe from this disease, and an additional several million died during and after World War II. Crowding, the scarcity of clean clothes, and dirt were the principal factors enabling the spread of typhus. The disease causes high fever and maculo-papular eruptions of the skin. Typhus is similar to a disease that occurs in the Rocky Mountains in the United States and is transmitted by ticks. The fact that epidemic typhus is transmitted by lice was discovered by Dr. Charles Nicolle; a discovery for which he received the Nobel Prize in 1928 (1). I met Dr. Nicolle in 1934 at the Pasteur Institute in Paris during my years as a guest investigator. I spoke to him several times in the corridor adjoining my laboratory. At my invitation he came to visit. He was a tall man, distinguished looking, impeccably dressed, lean, and slightly stooped, with dry skin and sparkling eyes. He was 68 years old at that time. It was difficult to talk with him because he was hard of hearing. In spite of his listening device, with its batteries and wires, which he was carrying, one had to almost shout to be understood. He was, like many Frenchmen, very polite and attentive. He agreed, at my request, to spend some time in my laboratory at the Pasteur Institute, and talk about his discovery. Before long, still a few years before World War II, he came to my laboratory. He arrived wearing a shirt with a starched collar and starched cuffs, and sat himself comfortably in a large chair. He told the following story. "I was delegated, some 30 years ago, recalled Dr. Nicolle, to become director of the Pasteur Institute in Tunis, and decided to do something about typhus, which was decimating the local population. The first step was to try to transmit the disease to experimental animals. I injected guinea pigs with blood from patients with typhus and observed that, at least in some of these animals, the injection produced only high temperature. I realized, nevertheless, that even though some of them did not develop fever, they still carried the causative agent. This way we learned that typhus could exist, at least in some species, without any symptoms, except now and then, only fever. The most important point, however, was to discover how it was transmitted from man to man under natural life conditions. I learned this by accident. Tunis was full of typhus patients; the hospital was full and the number of new patients increased every day. Not only was every bed occupied and waiting rooms filled, but patients were waiting in front of the hospital, on the streets, to be admitted. At that point I made the crucial observation, said Dr. Nicolle, that patients infected others out on the street, and also that their clothing was infectious; service personnel at the hospital and also in the laundry room became infected. The moment the patients were admitted to the hospital, however, after they had a hot bath and were dressed in hospital clothing, they ceased to be infectious. There was no longer fear of disease transmission in a hospital room full of patients. This observation was so simple and uncomplicated that it could have been made not necessarily by a physician, but by an administrator without professional medical training. I determined that there must therefore exist a transmitting vector, in the clothing and underwear of the patients. I anticipated, said Dr. Nicolle, that most probably lice could be responsible for the transmission of typhus from man to man." Dr. Nicolle continued his story. "At the end of June, 1909, I asked Dr. Emile Roux, who was at that time Director of the Pasteur Institute in Paris, for a few chimpanzees. My request was granted, and the chimpanzees arrived promptly. I injected one chimpanzee with blood from a patient suffering from typhus. After several days, I collected from the injected chimpanzee a few lice, and transferred them to another chimpanzee; before long, after about 10 days, this animal developed typhus. I repeated this experiment, with similar results. It was now obvious that typhus was transmitted by lice. That was in September, 1909. The first step in the search for typhus control was accomplished. Lice were demonstrated to be the transmitting vectors. The Tunisian government now began intensive measures to limit the typhus epidemic with attempts to combat infestation by lice. The initial step had been accomplished, but great difficulties were ahead. Typhus is very infectious and many laboratory workers engaged in research on the typhus epidemic became infected accidentally, in the course of their laboratory work, and some of them died of the disease. To become infected, a bite by a louse is not necessary. Lice infected with typhus become sick, change their color to red, and excrete millions of live infectious typhus microbes in their feces, which look like powder. A minimal amount of their excreta, rubbed or scratched into the skin, will cause the deadly disease. The infectious agent can also be absorbed through the eye; it is sufficient for a few fecal powder particles from an infected louse to find their way accidentally, carried perhaps unexpectedly on the tip of the finger of an investigator, into the eye, and a slight rubbing can then induce infection. A person infected with typhus and carrying lice may also carry louse droppings on the skin and clothes, and this becomes highly infectious at contact. The infected individual ceases to be infectious, however, after a hot bath with soap and sterilization of clothing and underwear. I was trying to find a vaccine against typhus, said Dr. Nicolle, and I mixed typhus bacilli with blood serum from those patients that had recovered. I injected myself with the mixture and remained in good health. I then injected a few children, because they are more resistant than adults, and you can imagine how frightened I was when they developed typhus; fortunately, they recovered.
منابع مشابه
Charles Nicolle (1866-1936).
Dept. of Medicine, TN Medical College & BYL Nair Ch. Hospital, Mumbai 400 008 C Nicolle was born in Rouen, France, to a practising physician. He received his medical education in Rouen and completed his graduation from the hospital in Paris. In 1893, he further studied in the Pasteur Institute of Paris, under the direction of Metchnikoff and Roux. In 1902, he was appointed the first director of...
متن کاملCharles-Jules-Henri Nicolle
sia. Nicolle's many accomplishments include the discovery that epidemic typhus is transmitted by body lice (Pediculus humanis corporis), discovery of the phenomenon of inap-parent infection, and possibly the first isolation of human influenza virus after experimental transmission. Nicolle made many other fundamental contributions to knowledge of infectious diseases. This year is the centenary o...
متن کاملHow the plague bacillus and its transmission through fleas were discovered: reminiscences from my years at the Pasteur Institute in Paris.
At present, there are only occasional cases of human plague reported in the United States. As an example, there were only 14 nonfatal cases of human plague recorded in 1988 and 5 cases in 1990. Each resulted from exposure to wild rodents, carrying the plague bacillus and fleas, in the western United States: Colorado, New Mexico, California, Arizona, and Texas. The affected individuals were trea...
متن کامل[The North African plague and Charles Nicolle's theory of infectious diseases].
Many infectious diseases were described in North Africa in 18th-19th centuries by European travellers. Most of them were allegedly imported by new migrant populations coming from sub-Saharan, European or Middle East countries. Plague outbreaks have been described since the Black Death as diseases of the Mediterranean harbours. Charles Nicolle and his collaborators at the Pasteur Institute were ...
متن کاملDr. Abolghasem Bahrami (1894–1950): Physician, Pasteurian, and a Pioneer of Microbiology and Public Health Planning in Iran
Dr. Abolghasem Bahrami was among the generation of Iranian scientists in the early twentieth century who gained most of their knowledge through resources available inside the country. Educated at Dar-ul-Funun Medical School, he was a physician with a great talent in learning, especially self-teaching natural sciences and European languages. He joined the Pasteur Institute of Iran (IPI) at the e...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید
ثبت ناماگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید
ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
دوره 93 20 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1996