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Article: Bubonic Plague
- Article from:
- World of Microbiology and Immunology
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Bubonic plague
Bubonic plague is a disease that is typically passed from rodents to other animals and humans via the bite of a flea. The flea acquires the bacterium that causes the disease as it lives on the skin of the rodent. Humans can also acquire the disease by direct contact with infected tissue. The bacterium is called
Yersinia pestis
, after one of its co-discoverers, Alexandre Yersin.
The disease is named because of the symptoms. The
bacterial infection
produces a painful swelling of the lymph nodes. These are called buboes. Often the first swelling is evident in the groin. During the Middle Ages, an huge epidemic of bubonic plague was referred to as the Black Death, because of ...