Not exact matches
Other wild animal disease donors
include rats, the source of the plague and
typhus.
The pilgrims probably also spread many diseases
including smallpox, measles, tuberculosis (TB), and
typhus.
The data,
including striking videos, the researchers say, «illustrate that the Vi capsular polysaccharide can act as a «cloaking device» that makes S.
Typhi practically «invisible» to neutrophils.»
1 By contrast, the native Africans exhibited a very high tolerance to infectious disease
including malaria carried by mosquitos,
typhus and fevers transmitted by lice and sleeping sickness borne by the tsetse fly.
They also spread disease
including tapeworms, hemoplasmas, plague, tularemia, Rickettsia
typhi, Rickettsia felis and Bartonella.
Other diseases transmitted from cats to humans
include hookworms, cat scratch disease, murine
typhus, tularemia, plague and rabies.