Picardy sweat

The Picardy sweat was an infectious disease of unknown etiology. It appeared in the northern French province of Picardy in 1718. Between 1718 and 1874, 194 epidemics of the Picardy sweat were recorded.[1] The last extensive outbreak was in 1906, which a French commission attributed to fleas from field mice.[2] A subsequent case was diagnosed in 1918 in a soldier in Picardy.[3]

It was named suette des Picards in France,[4] and picard'scher Schweiß or picard'sches Schweissfieber in Germany.[5] There were several longer descriptions of the disease.[6]

The disease was similar to the English sweat but differed in some symptoms and in its course and mortality rate. Some of the symptoms were high fever, rash, and bleeding from the nose. Many victims died within two days.[7]

See also

References

  1. Roberts, Llywelyn: "Sweating Sickness and Picardy Sweat" In: British Medical Journal, August 11 1945; 2(4414): 196
  2. Tidy, Henry, "Sweating Sickness and Picardy Sweat", British Medical Journal, Vol.2(4110), pp.63-64, July 14, 1945
  3. Foster, Michael. Contributions to Medical and Biological Research, p. 52, Hoeber, New York, 1919
  4. Michael W. Devereaux: The English Sweating Sickness. In: Southern Medical Journal, November 1968, Volume 61, Issue 11, ppg 1191-1194 (online)
  5. Justus F. C. Hecker: Der englische Schweiss: ein ärztlicher Beitrag zur Geschichte des fünfzehnten und sechszehnten Jahrhunderts. 1834, Seite 199 (online)
  6. Hans Zinsser, Gerald N. Grob: Rats, lice, and history. 2008, Seite 100 f. (online)
  7. George Child Kohn: Encyclopedia of plague and pestilence: from ancient times to the present. 2008, Seite 309 (online)
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