Human body lice could harbor the plague and spread it through biting 

Human body lice could harbor the plague and spread it through biting 




Rats and their fleas take the rap for spreading the plague, but lice that infest people may share the blame.
Some studies have suggested that Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that causes the plague, spread too quickly during the Black Death of 1346 to 1353 and other outbreaks to be the sole work of rats and fleas (SN: 6/15/22). Human body lice, which feed on human blood, might be involved, but previous research found that the lice aren’t very efficient at spreading the disease.
Researchers from the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Hamilton, Mont., revisited whether body lice (Pediculus humanus humanus) can spread the plague. The team simulated human skin with membranes that lice can puncture with their mouth parts to get a blood meal. Lice fed blood with Y. pestis in it developed infections that lasted about a week, the researchers found.
In some lice, the bacteria concentrated in a unique set of glands called Pawlowsky glands, which may produce a lubricant to help mouthparts extend and retract. Those lice could transmit the bacteria during a short three-hour feeding period and in large enough doses to cause disease, the researchers discovered. Lice that carried the plague in their guts could spread the bacteria if given 20 hours, but not as efficiently as the ones with the gland infections.

2024-05-21 13:00:00
Link from www.sciencenews.org

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