Tabes
|
A species of
consumption. [Buchan1798]
A wasting of the
body, characterized by emaciation and weakness, attended with
hectic fever, but without any cough or spitting, which last
symptoms distinguish it from phthisis. [Hooper1829].
Emaciation of the
whole body, with general languor, hectic fever, and, for the
most part, depressed spirits. [Dunglison1874].
A wasting away,
especially atrophy of the muscles. [Appleton1904] |
|
Example from an 1864 Church Record
from Slovakia: |
Tabes Dorsalis
|
A wasting of the body, attended at first with pain in the back or
loins, and afterward also in the neck and head, caused by a too
early or a too frequent use of venery. [Hooper1829].
.A wasting of the
body, attended at first with a pain in the back or loins, and
afterwards in the neck or head, sometimes caused, it has been
conceived, by too early or too frequent addiction to venery. The
term has also been employed synonymously with locomotor ataxy.
[Dunglison1874].
A late form of
syphilis resulting
in a hardening of the dorsal columns of the spinal cord and marked
by shooting pains, emaciation, loss of muscular coordination, and
disturbances of sensation and digestion. Also called locomotor ataxia.
[Heritage].
|
|
(Entry from
an 1843 Church Record in Münster, Switzerland) |
Tabes Mesenterica
|
A wasting disease of childhood characterized by chronic inflammation
of the lymphatic glands of the mesentery, attended with caseous
degeneration. [Webster].
|
|
Example from an 1826 death certificate
from Pennsylvania: |
|
Example from an 1855 Death Record
from Australia: |
Tachycardia |
Abnormally rapid heartbeat (over 100 beats
per minute). [Wordnet] |
Tapeworm
|
Any of various ribbon like, often very long flatworms of the class
Cestoda that lack an alimentary canal and are parasitic in the intestines
of vertebrates, including humans. [Dorland]
|
Tara
|
An
epidemic/contagious disease seen by Gmelin in Siberia, in the
town of Tara, which appears to have resembled somewhat the
Button Scurvy of Ireland. [Dunglison1874] |
Tarantism
|
St. Vitus' Dance. [Dunglison1874]
A disorder characterized by an uncontrollable
urge to dance, especially prevalent in southern Italy from the 15th
to the 17th century and popularly attributed to the bite of a tarantula.
[Heritage]
|
Tarry Stool
|
Stools with semi-digested blood.
|
Tenesmus
|
A painfully urgent but ineffectual attempt to urinate or defecate.
[Heritage]
Painful spasm of the
anal sphincter along with an urgent desire to defecate without
the significant production of feces; associated with irritable
bowel syndrome. [Wordnet]
|
Tertian /Fever
|
An intermittent , whose paroxysms recur every
third day, or every 48 hours. The mildest and most pernicious, intermittents
belong to this head. As a general rule, it is the most manageable
form of ague. [Dunglison1868]
|
Tetania
|
An obsolete synonym for tetany. [CancerWEB]
|
Tetanus
|
- An acute infectious
disease, recognized as caused by the bacillus tetanus, and characterized
by painful spasmodic contraction of the voluntary muscles, most
frequently those of the jaw, face, and neck; less frequently
those of the trunk, the extensors of the spine and limbs. It
has occurred as an epidemic during times of war. In the new-born
it is known as Trismus Neonatorum. [Thomas1907].
A painful and usually fatal disease, resulting generally
from a wound, and having as its principal symptom persistent spasm
of the voluntary muscles. When the muscles of the lower jaw are
affected, it is called {locked-jaw}, or {lickjaw}, and it takes
various names from the various incarnations of the body resulting
from the spasm. [Webster1913].
"tetanus" was first used: 1392. [Webster]
-
Information sheet from NYS
Dept of Health
-
Information
Card from the CDC
|
|
Example from an 1858 death certificate
from West Virginia: |
|
Example from a 1919 Death
Certificate from Georgia:
|
Tetanus Neonatorum
|
Tetanus occurring in newborn infants, usually due to infection of
umbilical area with Clostridium tetani, often a result of ritualistic
practices; has high fatality rate (about 60%). [CancerWEB].
|
|
Example from a 1919 Death
Certificate from Georgia:
|
Traumatic Tetanus
|
Tetanus
|
Tetany
|
An abnormal condition characterized by periodic painful muscular
spasms and tremors, caused by faulty calcium metabolism and associated
with diminished function of the parathyroid glands. [Heritage]
|
Tetters
|
Any of various skin diseases, such as eczema, psoriasis, or herpes,
characterized by eruptions and itching. [Heritage]
|
Honeycomb Tetter |
Favus |
Humid Tetter |
Impetigo |
Moist Tetter |
Impetigo |
Running Tetter |
Impetigo |
Scaly Tetter |
Psoriasis |
Thermic Fever
|
Sunstroke. [Random
House]
|
|
Example from a 1911 Death
Certificate from Ohio:
|
Thermoplegia
|
A rarely used term for sunstroke. [CancerWEB]
|
Third Disease
|
Rubella.
Third
of six classic exanthems, or rash-associated diseases, of childhood.
|
Three Day Fever
|
Sandfly Fever
|
Thrombosis
|
The obstruction of a blood vessel by a clot formed at the site of
obstruction; -- distinguished from embolism, which is produced by
a clot or foreign body brought from a distance. [Webster].
"Thrombosis"
- Example from a 1922 Death
Certificate from Georgia:
"Cerebral Thrombosis"
- Example from a 1961 Death
Certificate from Canada:
"Coronary Thrombosis"
- Example from a 1930 Death
Certificate from Ohio:
|
Thrush
|
Children are very subject to it. It appears
in small, white ulcers upon the tongue, gums, and around the mouth
and palate, resembling small particles of curdled milk. When the
disease is mild, it is confined to these parts; but when it is violent
and of long standing, it is apt to extend through the whole course
of the alimentary canal, from the mouth down to the anus; and so
to excite severe purging, flatulence, and other disagreeable symptoms.
The disease when recent and confined to the mouth, may in general
be easily removed; but when of long standing, and extending down
to the stomach and intestines, it very frequently proves fatal.
[Hooper1829].
A popular term for
aphthae on the tongue, lining membrane of the mouth, fauces,
etc., of infants. [Thomas1875]
A contagious disease caused by a fungus, Candida
albicans, that occurs most often in infants and children, characterized
by small whitish eruptions on the mouth, throat, and tongue, and
usually accompanied by fever, colic, and diarrhea;
Candidiasis.
[Heritage].
Fact sheet from CDC
|
|
Example from an 1854 death certificate
from West Virginia: |
|
Example from a 1917 Death
Certificate from Georgia:
|
Milk Thrush
|
A disease in
which appear roundish, pearl coloured vesicles, confined to the
lips, mouth, and intestinal canal, and generally terminating in
curd like sloughs. [Hoblyn1900].
Aphthae
|
Oral Thrush
|
Oral Candidiasis
|
White Thrush
|
Aphthae
|
Thyrotoxicosis
|
A condition resulting
from excessive concentrations of thyroid hormones in the body,
as in hyperthyroidism. [American Heritage].
Grave's Disease.
[Random House].
|
|
Example from an 1838 Death
Certificate from Ohio:
|
Tic Doloureux
|
A painful affection
of a nerve, so called from its sudden and momentary excruciating
stroke. The more appropriate name is neuralgia. It mostly
attacks the face, particularly that branch of the fifth pair,
which comes out of infra-orbitary foramen. [Hooper1843].
Severe pain affecting
the nerves of the face, especially the infra-orbitary branches of
the fifth pair. [Thomas1875]
Neuralgia.
[Thomas1907]
|
Tick Fever
|
Relapsing fever. Any of various febrile diseases transmitted by
ticks, such as Rocky Mountain spotted fever and Texas fever. [Heritage]
|
Tigretier
|
Dancing Mania.
[Dunglison1855] |
Tinea
|
Literally, a
"moth-worm." Scaldhead. It is characterized by a pustular
eruption, sometimes distinct and sometimes confluent,
unaccompanied with fever, the pustules drying and hardening into
thick scales or scabs. [Thomas1875]
A name applied to
various skin diseases, but especially to ringworm. [CancerWEB]
|
Tinea Cruris
|
Jock Itch
|
Tinea Pedis
|
Athlete's Foot
|
Tinnitus
|
A ringing or booming sensation in one or both ears; a symptom of
an ear infection or Meniere's disease. [Wordnet]
|
Tires
|
Milk Sickness
|
Tisic, Tissick
|
Phthisis
|
|
Example
from a 1734 London, England
Death Record:
|
Tituration
|
A staggering gait,
sometimes dependent on disease of the nervous system. [Tuke1892]
|
Tobia Fever
|
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
|
Tokens
|
A livid spot upon the body, indicating, or supposed to indicate,
the approach of death. "Like the fearful tokens of the plague are
mere forerunners of their ends." [CancerWEB]
|
Tonsillitis
|
Inflammation of the tonsils, especially the palatine tonsils. Cynanche
Tonsillaris. [CancerWEB]
|
|
Example
from an 1869 British
regimental paper
from India:
|
Toohutia
|
Dengue Fever
|
Tooth Rash
|
Strophulus Confertius
|
Tophus
|
A deposit of urates around a joint or in the external ear; diagnostic
of advanced or chronic gout. [Wordnet]
|
Tormina
|
Severe griping or wringing pains in the bowels; also, dysentery.
[Thomas1875]
Acute, colicky pains; gripes. [Webster]
|
Torticollis
|
Rheumatism of the
neck [Dunglison1868]
|
Toxĉmia, Toxemia
|
Poisoning of the
blood. [Dunglison1868].
|
|
Example from a 1921 Death
Certificate from Georgia: |
Trachealia
|
A name for the croup.
[Thomas1875]
|
Tracheitis
|
Cynanche trachealis.
[Dunglison1874]
Inflammation of the
trachea; another name for croup. [Thomas1875]
|
Trachelagra
|
Torticollis. Also, gout in the neck. [Dunglison1868]
|
Trauma
|
A serious injury or shock to the body, as from violence or an accident.
[Heritage]
|
Traumatic Fever
|
Elevation of temperature following an injury. [CancerWEB]
|
Trench Fever
|
Trench fever is a specific relapsing, infectious disease transmitted
from man to man by the body louse, Pediculus humanus var. corporis.
Blood and urine are infectious over a long period. It was first
recognized during WWI during which period it is estimated to have
caused roughly 25% of all cases of illness in the British Army in
France and in the German and Austrian armies. It was especially
prevalent among the heavily louse-infested troops in the field.
[Saunders1945]
|
Trichina Spiralis
|
A small species of entozoa discovered in the muscles. May be the
cause of the morbid phenomena produced by eating the flesh of animals
in which they existed, and likewise of sausage poisoning resulting
from eating pork and ham. Trichinosis. [Dunglison1874]
|
Trichinosis
|
A disease caused by eating undercooked meat, usually pork that contains
trichinae, which develop as adults in the intestines and as larvae
in the muscles, causing intestinal disorders, fever, nausea, muscular
pain, and edema of the face. [Heritage]
-
Fact sheet from CDC
-
Information sheet from NYS
Dept of Health
|
Trismus
|
A firm closing of the jaw due to tonic spasm
of the muscles of mastication from disease of the motor branch of
the trigeminal nerve. It is usually associated with general tetanus.
Also called lockjaw. [Heritage]
|
Trismus Nascentium
|
("Locked-Jaw of
Infants.") Occurring usually within two weeks from their birth.
[Thomas1875].
|
|
Example from an 1883 death certificate
from Pennsylvania: |
Trismus Neonatorum
|
Tetanus in New-borns.
Example from an 1885 death certificate
from Illinois:
|
Tropical Sore
|
Cutaneous
Leishmaniasis
|
Tsutsugamushi Disease
|
Scrub
Typhus
|
Tuberculosis
|
An infectious disease of humans and animals
caused by the tubercle bacillus and characterized by the formation
of tubercles on the lungs and other tissues of the body, often developing
long after the initial infection. [Heritage]. Due to the variety
of symptoms, TB was not identified as a unified disease until the
1820s and was not named tuberculosis until 1839 by J.L. Schoenlein.
Some forms of the disease were probably known to the ancient Greeks,
if not before, as the origins of the disease are in the first domestication
of cattle (which also gave humanity viral poxes). [Webster].
"tuberculosis" was first used: 1860
-
Fact sheet from CDC
-
Information sheet from NYS
Dept of Health
-
Fact sheet from WHO
|
|
Example from an 1883 death certificate
from Pennsylvania: |
Tuberculosis of Bones and Joints
|
Tuberculosis involving the bones and joints, producing strumous
arthritis, or white swelling, and cold abscess. [Dorland]
|
Miliary Tuberculosis
|
Tuberculosis. This
form bears a striking resemblance to the infectious fevers, especially
that of enteric fever. [Thomas1907].
An acute form in
which tiny tubercles are formed in a number of organs of the
body after dissemination of bacilli throughout the body by the
bloodstream. [Dorland].
Example from a 1929 death certificate
from New Brunswick, Canada:
|
Osseous Tuberculosis
|
Tuberculosis of bones and joints, tuberculosis involving the bones
and joints, producing strumous arthritis, or white swelling, and
cold abscess. [Dorland]
|
Tuberculosis Pneumonia
|
This uncommon type of TB presents as pneumonia and is very infectious.
Patients have a high fever and productive cough. It occurs most
often in extremely young children and the elderly. [Pulmonology]
|
Pulmonary Tuberculosis
|
Infection of the lung(s) with the pathogenic micro-organism known
as Mycobacterium tuberculosis. [Webster1913]
|
|
Example from a 1920 Death
Certificate from Louisiana: |
Tuberculous Spondylitis
|
Pott's Disease
|
Spinal Tuberculosis
|
Osteitis or caries of the vertebrae, usually occurring as a complication
of tuberculosis of the lungs; it is marked by stiffness of the vertebral
column, pain on motion, tenderness on pressure, prominence of certain
of the vertebral spines, and occasionally abdominal pain, abscess
formation, and paralysis. [Dorland]
|
|
Example from a 1919 Death
Certificate from Georgia: |
Tuberculous Adenitis
|
A form of tuberculosis characterized by swellings of the lymphatic
glands. The bacteria spread throughout the body, and may cause rubbery
enlargement of the lymph nodes in the neck (cervical lymph nodes)
as well as elsewhere. If these are not treated, the lymph nodes
may become ulcerated, producing draining sores. [Webster1913]
|
Tuberculous Meningitis
|
M. tuberculosis can infect the meninges (the main membrane surrounding
the brain and spinal cord). This can be devastating, leading to
permanent impairment and death. TB can be difficult to discern from
a brain tumor because it may present as a focal mass in the brain
with focal neurological signs. [Pulmonology]
|
Tumid
|
Swollen; distended. Used of a body part or organ. [Heritage]
|
Tumor
|
A morbid enlargement, from whatever cause; commonly applied to a
permanent swelling or enlargement. Tumors may be distinguished
into the sarcomatous, so named from their firm fleshy feel, and
the encysted, commonly called wens. [Thomas1875]
A term applied, from the earliest period of medical literature,
to any swelling of which the nature and origin were unknown. Thus
used in its most literal sense, the word is of purely clinical derivation
and has no pathological significance of any kind. Consequently a
very heterogeneous collection of swellings have been described as
tumors, including such diverse conditions as an abscess, a tubercular
gland, the enlarged spleen of malaria or a cancer. With the progress
of bacteriology and the improved technique of histology it has been
found possible, however, to separate these various swellings into
certain groups: (1) Inflammatory or Infective Tumors; (2) Tumors
due to Hypertrophy; (3) Cysts; (4) Spontaneous Tumors, or Tumors
proper. [Britannica1911].
An abnormal growth of tissue resulting from uncontrolled, progressive
multiplication of cells and serving no physiological function; Neoplasm.
[Heritage]
"tumor" was first
used: sometime in the early 15th century. [Webster]
|
|
Example from a 1921 Death
Certificate from Georgia: |
|
Example from an 1864 Church Record
from Slovakia:
|
Cystic Tumor
|
A tumor which is enclosed in a membrane called a cyst, connected
with the surrounding parts by the neighboring cellular substance.
[Webster]
|
Turgescence
|
Superabundance of
humours in a part. The term Turgescence of Bile was formerly
used to denote the passage of that fluid into the stomach and
its discharge by vomiting. [Dunglison 1868].
|
Turgid Liver
|
Superabundance of
humours in the liver. [Schmidt 2012].
|
Turkish Disease
|
Syphilis. The Persians
called it the Turkish disease.
|
Turn of Life
|
Critical Age. That
period of female life when the catamenia become irregular, and
ultimately cease. It is often attended with serious
constitutional disturbance, and is sometimes the commencement of
fatal diseases. [Thomas1875].
|
|
Example from an 1869 death record
from Michigan:
|
Tympanites / Tympany
|
A distention of the abdomen resulting from the accumulation of gas
or air in the intestine or peritoneal cavity. Also called tympany.
[Heritage].
|
|
Example
from a 1760
Death Record from England: |
Typhlitis
|
Caecitis, also called
typhlitis or typhlenteritis, is an inflammation of the caecum
(part of the large intestine) that may be associated with
infection. [Wikipedia].
|
|
Example from an 1897 death record
from Michigan:
|
Typhoid
|
Typhoid Fever. "typhoid" was first used in
popular English literature: sometime before 1856. [Webster]
|
Afebrile Typhoid Fever
|
Typhoid Fever with a sub-normal temperature; very rare. [Thomas1907]
|
Typhoid Cholera
|
Old term for cholera with predominantly cerebral manifestations
such as confusion or dementia. [CancerWEB]
|
Typhoid
Delirium
|
Typhomania;
the low muttering delirium of typhus and typhoid fever.
|
|
Entry from a German Church in New
York:
|
Typhoid Fever
|
A fever resembling
typhus, but by many pathologists regarded as distinct, and
characterized by inflammation and ulceration of the mucous
follicles of the intestines. [Hoblyn1855]
Applied to a fever
distinguished from typhus by a lesion of the intestines, but
closely resembling it in other respects. By many it is thought
to be typhus merely complicated with the intestinal lesion.
[Thomas1875]
Typhoid or enteric fever is a specific infectious
fever characterized mainly by its insidious onset, by a peculiar
course of the temperature, by marked abdominal symptoms occurring
in connection with a specific lesion of the bowels, by an eruption
upon the skin, by its uncertain duration, and by a liability to
relapses. This fever has received various names, such as gastric
fever, abdominal typhus, infantile remittent fever, slow fever,
nervous fever, pythogenic fever, etc. The name of " typhoid " was
given by Louis in 1829, as a derivative from typhus. Until a comparatively
recent period typhoid was not distinguished from typhus. For, although
it had been noticed that the course of the disease and its morbid
anatomy were different from those of ordinary cases of typhus, it
was believed that they merely represented a variety of that malady.
The distinction between the two diseases appears to have been first
accurately made in 1836. [Britannica1911].
A disease formerly confounded with typhus,
but essentially different from the latter. It is characterized by
fever, lasting usually three or more weeks, diarrhea with evacuations
resembling pea soup in appearance, and prostration and muscular
debility, gradually increasing and often becoming profound at the
acme of the disease. Its local lesions are a scanty eruption of
spots, resembling flea bites, on the belly, enlargement of the spleen,
and ulceration of the intestines over the areas occupied by Peyer's
glands. The virus, or contagion, of this fever is supposed to be
a microscopic vegetable organism, or bacterium. [Webster]
-
Information sheet from NYS
Dept of Health
|
|
Example from an 1859 death certificate
from West Virginia: |
|
Example from an 1870 death record
from West Kentucky: |
|
Entry
from a Civil War Hospital Record:
|
Typhoid Fever of India |
Asiatic Cholera. [Dunglison 1903]. |
Typhoid Malaria
|
Typhomalarial Fever
|
Typhoid Pleurisy
|
An obsolete term for acute or subacute pleurisy with typhoid symptoms.
[CancerWEB]
|
Typhoid Pneumonia
|
Bilious Pneumonia [Dunglison1874].
Pneumonia with typhoid symptoms or
accompanying typhoid fever; children may develop
bronchopneumonia and adults may develop lobar pneumonia, with
suppuration and empyema. [Dorland].
Pneumonia complicating
typhoid fever. [CancerWEB]
|
Typhomalarial Fever
|
A form of fever having symptoms both of malarial and typhoid fever.
[CancerWEB].
|
|
Example from an 1891 death certificate
from West Virginia: |
Typhus
|
Malignant fever.
[Hoblyn1855]
A kind of continued
fever, attended with great prostration of the nervous and
vascular systems, with a tendency to putrefaction in the fluids,
and vitiation of the secretions; putrid fever. [Thomas1875]
A group of acute, arthropod-borne infections
caused by rickettsiae that are closely related clinically and pathologically
but differ in signs and symptoms and severity; all are characterized
by severe headache, chills, high fever, stupor, and a macular, maculopapular,
petechial, or papulovesicular eruption. The three entities making
up the group are epidemic t., its recrudescent form (Brill-Zinsser
disease), and murine t. Called also typhus fever. In English-speaking
countries, often used alone to refer to epidemic typhus, whereas
in several European languages it refers to typhoid fever. [Dorland].
"typhus" was first used: 1785. [Webster]
|
|
Example
from a Mecklenburg, Germany Church Death Record:
|
Abdominal Typhus
|
Typhoid Fever.
Example from an 1890 Death
Certificate from Illinois:
|
African Tick Typhus
|
One of the tick-borne rickettsial diseases of the eastern hemisphere,
similar to rocky mountain spotted fever, but less severe, with fever,
a small ulcer (tache noire) at the site of the tick bite, swollen
glands nearby (satellite lymphadenopathy), and a red raised (maculopapular)
rash. Also called fièvre boutonneuse. [CancerWEB]
|
Typhus Carcerum
|
Jail Fever.
[Hooper1822]
("Typhus of
prisons.") The jail-fever, a name for typhus gravior; also
called febris carcerum ("fever of prisons"). [Thomas1875].
|
Typhus Castrensis |
("Camp typhus.") A name for typhus
gravior; otherwise called febris castrensis, or "camp fever."
These names, however, must be understood to refer to European
armies. Typhus, in its unmixed character, has seldom, if ever,
made its appearance in the armies of the United States.
[Thomas1875] |
Typhus Egyptiacus
|
Plague of Egypt
|
Endemic Typhus
|
Murine Typhus
|
Epidemic Typhus
|
A severe acute disease with prolonged high fever up to 40° c (104°
f), intractable headache, and a pink-to-red raised rash. The cause
is a microorganism called rickettsia prowazekii. It is found worldwide
and is transmitted by lice. [CancerWEB]
|
European Typhus
|
Epidemic Typhus
|
Typhus Fever
|
Typhus.
|
|
Example from an 1826 death certificate
from Pennsylvania: |
Flea Typhus
|
Murine Typhus
|
Typhus Gravior
|
Epidemic Typhus. A severe species of typhus. [Hooper1822]
("Severe typhus.")
The malignant form of typhus; also called, according to
circumstances, febris cancerum, and febris castrensis.
[Thomas1875]
|
Typhus Ichteroides
|
Yellow Fever
|
Typhus Icterus
|
Typhus with symptoms of jaundice. [Hooper1822]
|
Louse-borne Typhus
|
Epidemic Typhus
|
Mite Typhus
|
Scrub Typhus
|
- Typhus Mitior
|
- The Low Fever.
[Hooper1822]
-
- Is characterized
by slight Shiverings; heavy, vertginous headache; great oppression,
peculiar expression of anxiety, nausea, sighing, despondency,
and coma or quiet delirium. [Dunglison1868]
("Milder typhus.") The milder form of
typhus, or low fever; slow fever; also called febris lenta
("slow fever"), febris nervosa ("nervous fever"). [Thomas1875] |
Murine Typhus
|
An acute infectious disease with fever, headache, and rash, all
quite similar to, but milder than, epidemic typhus, caused by a
related microorganism, rickettsia typhi (mooseri), transmitted to
humans by rat fleas (xenopsylla cheopis). The animal reservoir includes
rats, mice and other rodents. Murine typhus occurs sporadically
worldwide but is more prevalent in congested rat-infested urban
areas. Also known as endemic typhus, rat-flea typhus, and urban
typhus of malaya. [CancerWEB]
|
Typhus Petechialis
|
Typhus Gravior with purple spots. [Hooper1822]
|
Recrudescent Typhus
|
A recrudescence of epidemic typhus occurring years after the initial
infection. [Dorland]
|
Typhus Recurrens
|
Relapsing Fever
|
Scrub Typhus
|
A mite-borne infectious disease caused by a microorganism, rickettsia
tsutsugamushi, characteristically with fever, headache, a raised
(macular) rash, swollen glands (lymphadenopathy) and a dark crusted
ulcer (called an eschar or tache noire) at the site of the chigger
(mite larva) bite. This disease occurs in the area bounded by Japan,
India, and Australia. Known also as tsutsugamushi disease, mite-borne
typhus, and tropical typhus. [CancerWEB]
|
Shop Typhus
|
A mild form of typhus occurring in urban areas, reported in Mediterranean
areas. [CancerWEB]
|
Sinking Typhus
|
Cerebro-Spinal
Meningitis
|
Typhus Syncopalis
|
Cerebro-Spinal Fever
|
Tyriasis
|
A species of
Leprosy in which
the skin may be easily withdrawn from the flesh. [Hooper1822]
|