3. Contraction Concentration camps teemed with these body lice, and many military commanders considered using them as biological weapons during war; that was the extent to how harmful the lice were. When the lice found a human, and started to feed on them, the lice would defecate where they would feed. If the human host scratched the spot where they were bitten, they would rub in the feces, which contained the bacteria. The bacteria would then enter their cell, steal the energy, and multiply. Title: Typhus DiseaseInfo: The back of a person who has typhus.
Anne Frank was diagnosed with typhus, a highly contagious and potentially fatal infectious disease caused by a bacteria called Rickettsia. She contracted the disease while in a concentration camp during World War II.
Anne Frank was 15 when she died from typhus.
anne frank DIED of a disease called typhus. Only her father Otto Frank survived.
Anne Frank died in a concentration camp, most likely from typhus, a disease that was rampant in the camp due to poor sanitation and overcrowding. Symptoms of typhus include fever, headache, rash, and muscle pain. Unfortunately, as a result of extreme hardships and poor conditions in the camp, Anne Frank succumbed to the disease.
Anne Frank suffered from typhus, a bacterial infection spread by body lice. She contracted the disease while in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp during World War II.
Anne Frank was transported to a concentration camp when she and her family were found hiding and died of typhus three weeks before the concentration camps were released.Anne Frank and her sister, Margot, were eventually transferred to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp where they both died of typhus in March 1945.
Anne Frank died of typhus in Bergen-Belson Concentration Camp in March 1945 after her sister, Margot, died of the same disease.
the disease that took anne's life is called typhus
Anne died from a disease called typhus
Anne Frank died of typhus and starvation in the concentration camp she went to in germany. Typhus is not cancer.
Anne Frank and her sister Margot died in March 1945 in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp from typhus, a disease spread by lice. Their deaths occurred just before the camp was liberated by Allied forces.
No, Anne Frank died from Typhus March 1945 in Bergen - Belsen Camp. A few days after her older sister Margot Frank died from the same disease. She died from Typhus beause the disease were rampant in the camp and she was also starved of food.