Bubonic Plague has 1-15% mortality rate in treated cases and a 40-60% mortality rate in untreated cases. Septicemic plague has a 40% mortality rate in treated and 100% in untreated cases.
Pneumonic plague has 100% mortality rate if not treated within 24 hours of infection.
Around 50 million people died in the Black Death. This is a truly mind-boggling statistic. It overshadows the horrors of the Second World War, and is twice the number murdered by Stalin’s regime in the Soviet Union. As a proportion of the population that lost their lives, the Black Death caused unrivalled mortality.
The symptoms of the pneumonic plague include weakness, fever, headache, and shortness of breath. They usually progress for two to four days and may eventually cause respiratory failure and shock. Even with treatment, symptoms of this disease result in death 75 percent of the time.
Bubonic Plague has 1-15% mortality rate in treated cases and a 40-60% mortality rate in untreated cases. Septicemic plague has a 40% mortality rate in treated and 100% in untreated cases.
Pneumonic plague has 100% mortality rate if not treated within 24 hours of infection.
Around 50 million people died in the Black Death. This is a truly mind-boggling statistic. It overshadows the horrors of the Second World War, and is twice the number murdered by Stalin’s regime in the Soviet Union. As a proportion of the population that lost their lives, the Black Death caused unrivalled mortality.
The symptoms of the pneumonic plague include weakness, fever, headache, and shortness of breath. They usually progress for two to four days and may eventually cause respiratory failure and shock. Even with treatment, symptoms of this disease result in death 75 percent of the time.
The symptoms of secondary pneumonic plague are a high fever, a cough that brings up bloody sputum, breathing problems, and respiratory failure. This type of plague affects a person's lungs.
There were three different types of plague, bubonic, pneumonic and septicemic. The main symptoms were headache, nausea, vomiting, fever, diarrhea and difficulty breathing.
There were two forms of plague, one Bubonic and the other Pneumonic. Pneumonic was not currable.
Yes
*
yes if someone who had the black death breathed on you or you breathed it in the you would have the pneumonic plague
Pneumonic Plague is the most serious form of plague. It should not be confused with Bubonic Plague, the "Black Death" of Medieval Europe. As it's name implies, it affects the lungs. It can be successfully treated if antibiotics are administered within the first 24 hours of symptoms appearing. Without treatment it is uniformly fatal in 36-48 hours. 98% of the cases reported each year occur in Africa.
1674
pneumonic plague
The Bubonic plague killed one third of Europe and much of Asia. I'm not sure there was such a thing as the "Numonic" plague. There is, however, something called pneumonic plague, which is a lung disease.
Symptoms, which appear within one to three days after infection, include a severe, overwhelming pneumonia, with shortness of breath, high fever, and blood in the phlegm.
The three types of plague are: bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic.