Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis has likely been present in humans since the dawn of mankind. Signs of the disease have been found in human remains from the Neolithic era and in Egyptian mummies from 3000 BC. References to a disease called “yakshma,” the Hindu word for consumption, appear in writings from ancient India and Emporer Shennong of China refers to the disease in a medical text written in 2700 BC. The Greek physician Hippocrates described a disease he called phthisis as the most common and deadly illness of his time. Twice in the Bible, God threatens that he will smite the Israelites with a disease called shachepheth (in Hebrew shakh-eh’-feth means “a wasting disease” or “consumption”), which is described as a “terror, consumption and the burning ague…” (Leviticus 26:16), and a “fever, inflammation, and heat” that “pursues you until you perish” (Deuteronomy 28:22). Tuberculosis was the principle cause of death in 17th century Europe, infecting those at every level of the socioeconomic hierarchy including kings Louis XIII of France and Edward VI of England, earning it the name “The White Plague.”
Although doctors in these societies varied in their diagnoses of the disease, the symptoms classically associated with phthisis included high fevers, sweats, breathlessness, severe cough and bloody sputum, and rapid weight loss. Because the disease appeared to eat away, or “consume,” the flesh of its victims, Western European doctors most commonly referred to as consumption. Rene Laennec, a French scientist, who suffered himself from tuberculosis and eventually died from the disease, was one of the first doctors to develop a precise method for diagnosing the pulmonary lesions cause by phthisis by listening to his patients breathe using his invention, the stethoscope. Laennec’s French colleagues (Pierre Charles Alexandre Louis and Gaspard Laurent Bayle) used his findings to evaluate the progression of the disease in the body and identify six types of the disease. German scientist Johann Lukas Schöenlein was the first to describe phthisis as “tuberculosis” in 1839.
http://scalar.usc.edu/hc/tuberculosis-exhibit/media/Cristobal_Rojas_37a.JPG La Miseria by Cristobal Rojas, 1886 |
It is impossible to know exactly how many people were infected by the white plague because “consumption” was used to describe any number of chronic lung disorders and many non-pulmonary forms of the disease were largely misdiagnosed. But by the estimate of some medical historians, as many half of the population in early 19th century England died from tuberculosis. These included some of Britain’s most famous literary icons: Lord Byron, Percy Shelly, John Keats, and Brönte sisters Maria, Elizabeth and Emily. The disease claimed the lives of Frederic Chopin and Anton Chekov, and became the subject of Giacomo Puccini’s opera La Boheme. Nineteenth century American writers suffered from tuberculosis as well, including Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry David Thoreau and the family of Ralph Waldo Emerson. With so many of the writers and artists of the nineteenth century making the disease - and their personal struggles to overcome it - the subject of their work, tuberculosis became a ubiquitous part of both European and American culture.
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