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1.
Med Hist ; 67(1): 57-73, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37461279

ABSTRACT

Intermittent fever is a historical diagnosis with a contested meaning. Historians have associated it with both benign malaria and severe epidemics during the Early Modern Era and early nineteenth century. Where other older medical diagnoses perished under changing medical paradigms, intermittent fever 'survived' into the twentieth century. This article studies the development in how intermittent fever was framed in Denmark between 1826 and 1886 through terminology, clinical symptoms and aetiology. In the 1820s and 1830s, intermittent fever was a broad disease category, which the diagnosis 'koldfeber'. Danish physicians were inspired by Hippocratic teachings in the early nineteenth century, and patients were seen as having unique constitutions. For that reason, intermittent fevers presented itself as both benign and severe with a broad spectrum of clinical symptoms. As the Parisian school gradually replaced humoral pathology in the mid-nineteenth century, intermittent fever and koldfeber became synonymous for one disease condition with a nosography that resembles modern malaria. The nosography of intermittent fever remained consistent throughout the second half of the nineteenth century. Although intermittent fever was conceptualized as caused by miasmas throughout most of the nineteenth century, the discovery of the Plasmodium parasite in 1880 led to a change in the conceptualization of what miasmas were. The article concludes that the development of how intermittent fever was framed follows the changing scientific paradigms that shaped Danish medicine in the nineteenth century.


Subject(s)
Malaria , Physicians , Humans , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Malaria/history , Fever/history , Denmark
2.
Zhonghua Yi Shi Za Zhi ; 53(6): 360-365, 2023 Nov 28.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39069509

ABSTRACT

Shang Han Lun Xuan Zhu(«¼,Annotation of Treatise on Febrile Diseases) is a representative work of Zang Yingzhan, a famous physician in Zhucheng of Shandong who was as famous as Huang Yuanyu during the Qianlong period of the Qing Dynasty.The book was not published, but has been preserved only in manuscripts, of which 5 copies are now preserved.By comparing the five manuscripts seen, it is found that the Zhuang Enze version is unique in the existing version of this book, exquisite and generous, beautifully copied, with important documentary value. Zhuang Enze adopts the theories of various schools, supplements prescriptions, analyze medical theory with his unique insights.The reason may be related to his family's practice of medicine for generations, its philosophy of loving reading, copying books, and collecting books, and also related to its protection of local and state documents and the dissemination of lost culture.


Subject(s)
Fever , China , Fever/history , Books/history , Medicine, Chinese Traditional/history , Humans
3.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 27(3): 723-740, 2020.
Article in English, Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33111786

ABSTRACT

Although fevers (with the exception of yellow fever) have not yet been fully explored by the historiography of Brazilian health, they were almost inevitable in nineteenth-century Brazilian society, affecting huge portions of the population. Their victims suffered from a wide variety of symptoms, and identification and treatment of these symptoms were the object of intense debates in medical circles. The Luso-Brazilian intelligentsia considered European medical debates as well as their own clinical experiences and attempted to provide answers in a flurry of publications. Even so, the manifestations of fever in the tropics presented a challenge that lay beyond their European training, forcing them to combine experiences acquired in different parts of the Empire to comprise specific knowledge on tropical fevers.


Com exceção da febre amarela, as febres ainda foram pouco exploradas pela historiografia da saúde brasileira. No século XIX, contudo, sua presença na vida social era quase incontornável, atingindo enormes parcelas da população. Suas vítimas padeciam de uma grande variedade de sintomas em que a identificação e a terapêutica eram objeto de intensos debates nos círculos médicos. A intelectualidade luso-brasileira, atenta tanto aos debates médicos europeus quanto a experiências clínicas, esforçou-se para fornecer respostas na forma de intensa produção impressa; no entanto, as manifestações febris encontradas nos trópicos representavam um desafio extra à sua formação europeia, forçando-a a conjugar experiências adquiridas em partes distintas do Império na constituição de saberes específicos sobre as febres tropicais.


Subject(s)
Fever/history , Brazil/epidemiology , Female , Fever/epidemiology , History, 19th Century , Humans , Male , Portugal
4.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 27(3): 723-740, set. 2020.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-1134081

ABSTRACT

Resumo Com exceção da febre amarela, as febres ainda foram pouco exploradas pela historiografia da saúde brasileira. No século XIX, contudo, sua presença na vida social era quase incontornável, atingindo enormes parcelas da população. Suas vítimas padeciam de uma grande variedade de sintomas em que a identificação e a terapêutica eram objeto de intensos debates nos círculos médicos. A intelectualidade luso-brasileira, atenta tanto aos debates médicos europeus quanto a experiências clínicas, esforçou-se para fornecer respostas na forma de intensa produção impressa; no entanto, as manifestações febris encontradas nos trópicos representavam um desafio extra à sua formação europeia, forçando-a a conjugar experiências adquiridas em partes distintas do Império na constituição de saberes específicos sobre as febres tropicais.


Abstract Although fevers (with the exception of yellow fever) have not yet been fully explored by the historiography of Brazilian health, they were almost inevitable in nineteenth-century Brazilian society, affecting huge portions of the population. Their victims suffered from a wide variety of symptoms, and identification and treatment of these symptoms were the object of intense debates in medical circles. The Luso-Brazilian intelligentsia considered European medical debates as well as their own clinical experiences and attempted to provide answers in a flurry of publications. Even so, the manifestations of fever in the tropics presented a challenge that lay beyond their European training, forcing them to combine experiences acquired in different parts of the Empire to comprise specific knowledge on tropical fevers.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , History, 19th Century , Fever/history , Portugal , Brazil/epidemiology , Fever/epidemiology
8.
APMIS ; 126(11): 831-837, 2018 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30357961

ABSTRACT

During World War I, a mysterious new disease affected soldiers on both sides of battle field. The first reports described a relapsing fever of unknown origin with body lice being suggested as the vector. The outbreak affected >1 000 000 people, mostly soldiers fighting in front-line trenches. Shortly afterward, the illness was known as Trench fever, of which the causal infectious agent is currently classified as Bartonella quintana.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks/history , Endocarditis/epidemiology , Fever/epidemiology , Lice Infestations/epidemiology , Trench Fever/epidemiology , Animals , Bartonella quintana/pathogenicity , Bartonella quintana/physiology , Endocarditis/history , Endocarditis/physiopathology , Europe/epidemiology , Fever/history , Fever/physiopathology , History, 20th Century , Humans , Insect Vectors/microbiology , Lice Infestations/history , Pediculus/microbiology , Recurrence , Trench Fever/history , Trench Fever/physiopathology , World War I
11.
Crit Care ; 21(1): 68, 2017 03 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28320432

ABSTRACT

This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2017. Other selected articles can be found online at http://ccforum.com/series/annualupdate2017 . Further information about the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine is available from http://www.springer.com/series/8901 .


Subject(s)
Bacterial Infections/complications , Fever/therapy , Virus Diseases/complications , Bacterial Infections/diagnosis , Bacterial Infections/therapy , Fever/etiology , Fever/history , History, 20th Century , Hospitalization , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Parents/psychology , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Virus Diseases/diagnosis , Virus Diseases/therapy
12.
J R Coll Physicians Edinb ; 47(3): 288-295, 2017 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29465109

ABSTRACT

This paper reviews Churchill's illness in Carthage in December 1943. It was characterised by fever that lasted 6 days, left lower lobe pneumonia and two episodes of atrial fibrillation. He was managed in a private villa by Lord Moran, his personal physician, with the assistance of two nurses and the expert advice of colleagues. Sulphadiazine and digitalis leaf were prescribed and Churchill recovered. It is remarkable that, despite the severity of his illness, he continued to direct the affairs of State from his bed.


Subject(s)
Atrial Fibrillation/history , Famous Persons , Fever/history , Pneumonia/history , Atrial Fibrillation/drug therapy , Digitalis , Digitalis Glycosides/history , Digitalis Glycosides/therapeutic use , Fever/drug therapy , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Pneumonia/drug therapy , Sulfadiazine/history , Sulfadiazine/therapeutic use , Tunisia , United Kingdom
13.
J R Coll Physicians Edinb ; 46(3): 206-213, 2016 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27959358

ABSTRACT

Around the year 1643, Joan Baptista van Helmont, a Flemish chemist, alchemist and physician who had devised what he claimed to be a new form of medicine, proposed a 'challenge' to traditional Galenic physicians to compare treatment of fever by traditional methods and by a regime which did not involve bloodletting and purging. Two groups of patients were to be treated and 'casting of lots' was to be used - in some way not specified in detail - to decide who received which treatment. This 'challenge' has been regarded as the first proposal for the use of randomisation in a clinical trial. This paper explains the background to the challenge and discusses what can be deduced from Helmont's text about the details of how he proposed that the 'trial' was to be carried out. It concludes that internal evidence in Helmont's writings makes it certain that no such 'trial' was ever conducted. It seems that the 'challenge' was probably a rhetorical device to support Helmont's vehement criticism of traditional Galenic medicine and its practitioners, and, in particular, toemphasise his absolute opposition to the use of bloodletting as a medicaltreatment. An appendix includes a short summary of Helmont's theories of the origins of disease and transcriptions of the passages of Helmont's Latin text translated in the article.


Subject(s)
Fever/history , Medicine/methods , Philosophy, Medical/history , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic/history , Bloodletting/history , Bloodletting/statistics & numerical data , Cathartics/history , Cathartics/therapeutic use , Communication , Fever/therapy , History, 17th Century , Humans , Research Design
14.
Emerg Infect Dis ; 22(12): 2160-2164, 2016 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27662463

ABSTRACT

During 2014-2015, patients in northeastern Kenya were assessed for brucellosis and characteristics that might help clinicians identify brucellosis. Among 146 confirmed brucellosis patients, 29 (20%) had negative serologic tests. No clinical feature was a good indicator of infection, which was associated with animal contact and drinking raw milk.


Subject(s)
Brucellosis/epidemiology , Fever/epidemiology , Fever/etiology , Hospitalization , Animals , Brucella abortus , Brucellosis/history , Brucellosis/therapy , Female , Fever/history , Fever/therapy , Geography, Medical , History, 21st Century , Humans , Kenya/epidemiology , Male , Risk Factors , Seroepidemiologic Studies , Socioeconomic Factors , Zoonoses
15.
J Therm Biol ; 56: 18-30, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26857973

ABSTRACT

By the time of Hippocrates and Galen the notion of fevers and temperature were known. Through ensuing centuries, ancient Greek, Roman, and medieval savants and physicians made additional contributions to the understanding of fever, temperature, and thermometry. By the end of that era, there was a working definition of what constitutes a rationale temperature scale, the distinction between fever as a symptom and fever as a disease, an elaborate classification scheme for temperature, hypotheses as to the causes of fever, and methods for measuring fevers. Based on the definition of fever at that time, the 16th century scientist Galileo promulgated production of thermometric instruments hundreds of years before they were routinely used in the clinical setting. In this work we examine the history of fever and clinical thermometry in the ancient world through the end of the eighteenth century with descriptions of instruments for its measure and human relationship to fever.


Subject(s)
Fever/diagnosis , Fever/history , Thermometers/history , Thermometry/history , Thermometry/instrumentation , History, 15th Century , History, 16th Century , History, Ancient , History, Medieval , Humans
16.
J Med Cuneif ; (26): 1-32, 2016 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30352143

ABSTRACT

Containing twenty prescriptions, the Neo- or Late-Babylonian tablet edited here is one of the most comprehensive sources for the phylacteries against fever. Although a duplicate of the whole text is yet unknown to me, several parallels or text variants of the single prescriptions can be identified in the published and unpuplished medical tablets from A9sur and Ninive. In the present paper I transliterate and translate the tablet, with special attention to the fever prescriptions and their parallels?


Subject(s)
Fever/history , Prescriptions/history , Fever/therapy , History, Ancient , Humans , Magic/history , Mesopotamia , Translations
17.
Vesalius ; 22(2): 64-8, 2016 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29283543

ABSTRACT

Based on a study of the history of exploration and settlement in North Australia in the 18th and 19th centuries, I became particularly interested in the concept of a 'good port' in the tropics and how in time this concept shifted. The threat of fevers played a significant part in these shifts. In this overview, I examine how similar shifts in the concept of a good port occurred in the maritime silk and spice routes of South and Shout East Asia.


Subject(s)
Colonialism/history , Commerce/history , Fever/history , Transportation Facilities/history , Australia , Fever/psychology , History, 16th Century , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , India , Indonesia , Silk/economics , Spices/economics
18.
Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi ; 40(4): 744-8, 2015 Feb.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26137701

ABSTRACT

To make a systematic analysis on literatures concerning traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) advices in Treatise on Febrile Diseases, and summarize the main connotations of traditional Chinese medicine advices, relevant TCM advices in Treatise on Febrile Diseases were collected, screened, compared, summarized and analyzed according to TCM dosage form preparation methods, TCM administration methods, medication contraindications and nursing after TCM administration. The literatures concerning medications in Treatise on Febrile Diseases were consulted, summarized and compared to standardize medicine advices and facilitate rational clinical application of TCMs. The standard medicine advices were as follows. The boiling water for TCMs shall be tap water and well water. The decoctions that have effects in promoting blood and meridians can be boiled with wine. The decoctions containing toxic components can be boiled with honey. Some TCMs shall be boiled with special methods, e. g. Herba Ephedra that could be boiled before other medicine and skimmed. Japonica rice could be added in decoctions to measure the duration of decoctions. Different dosages were required for different forms (litre, pill, medicine spoon). Administration times, temperature and frequency shall be adjusted according to target positions, functions and stage of illness. As for dietary contraindications during medication, thick porridges are recommended, where foods impacting medicine efficacy are prohibited. Regarding nursing after medication is important to recover physical functions, particularly warm porridges can go with diaphoretic recipes, while thick porridges can go with purgative recipes. And drug efficacies shall be defined by observing urine and excrements, and blood form. In conclusion, Treatise on Febrile Diseases is the first book that discusses TCM advices and records them in details. In this study, new standard medicine advices were proposed to provide important basis for improving clinical advices of TCMs and supports for developing the TCM dispensing technology.


Subject(s)
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/administration & dosage , Drugs, Chinese Herbal/history , Fever/drug therapy , Fever/history , Chin , Cooking , Drug Administration Routes , Drug Administration Schedule , Drug Interactions , Drugs, Chinese Herbal/chemistry , History, Ancient , Humans , Medicine in Literature
20.
Compr Physiol ; 4(2): 657-89, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24715563

ABSTRACT

This article presents a historical overview and an up-to-date review of hyperthermia-induced fatigue during exercise in the heat. Exercise in the heat is associated with a thermoregulatory burden which mediates cardiovascular challenges and influence the cerebral function, increase the pulmonary ventilation, and alter muscle metabolism; which all potentially may contribute to fatigue and impair the ability to sustain power output during aerobic exercise. For maximal intensity exercise, the performance impairment is clearly influenced by cardiovascular limitations to simultaneously support thermoregulation and oxygen delivery to the active skeletal muscle. In contrast, during submaximal intensity exercise at a fixed intensity, muscle blood flow and oxygen consumption remain unchanged and the potential influence from cardiovascular stressing and/or high skin temperature is not related to decreased oxygen delivery to the skeletal muscles. Regardless, performance is markedly deteriorated and exercise-induced hyperthermia is associated with central fatigue as indicated by impaired ability to sustain maximal muscle activation during sustained contractions. The central fatigue appears to be influenced by neurotransmitter activity of the dopaminergic system, but inhibitory signals from thermoreceptors arising secondary to the elevated core, muscle and skin temperatures and augmented afferent feedback from the increased ventilation and the cardiovascular stressing (perhaps baroreceptor sensing of blood pressure stability) and metabolic alterations within the skeletal muscles are likely all factors of importance for afferent feedback to mediate hyperthermia-induced fatigue during submaximal intensity exercise. Taking all the potential factors into account, we propose an integrative model that may help understanding the interplay among factors, but also acknowledging that the influence from a given factor depends on the exercise hyperthermia situation.


Subject(s)
Exercise/physiology , Fatigue/etiology , Fever/complications , Hot Temperature/adverse effects , Fever/history , Heat Exhaustion/history , Heat Exhaustion/physiopathology , Heat Stroke/history , Heat Stroke/physiopathology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Stress, Physiological/physiology
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