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If you mean diseases, you could catch hypothermia, athletes foot, a terrible cold, cancer from wounds which have not been treated properly and loads others due to trench conditions as they were horrible!
A sickness called trench fever was caused by lice during World War 1. Trench fever started with severe pain all over the body and was followed by a high fever, headaches and giddiness. Trench fever took around 12 weeks to recover and that was AWAY from the trenches. Also Rats carried horrible diseases throughout the trench's and regularly ate what little supplies of food the soldiers had to eat.
yes it was many people died
Common diseases and illnesses in the trenches were that there were many rats in the trenches, this gave the soldiers diseases. There was trench foot, which made their feet turn rot and swell up from the moisture. Some people said they could put a bayonet through their foot and they wouldn't feel it There was also trench fever, which was found to be caused by lice, and in the last year of the war, the "Spanish Flu" hit the world, including the trenches of Europe. In the War Diary I studied, the most common illnesses were boils and skin problems or ICT the soldiers were vaccinated against typhoid. Lastly shell shock and blindness or burns from mustard gas.
Well the soldiers were affected by several things, for example; living conditions, trench foot, lice etc. also were effected by several injuries and shell-shock.
Lice infestation is a serious public health problem because some lice can carry organisms that cause other diseases, including relapsing fever, trench fever, and epidemic typhus.
The term trench fever refers to the crowded conditions in which troops fought in during World War I and World War II. Because the causative bacteria are passed among humans through contact with body lice.
trench fever was a moderatley serious disease caused by lice. It was a particularly painful disease that caused sudden pain (i.e. joint pain, muscle pain, rashes, severe headaches ) and was followed by high fever. soldiers with trench fever had to be sent away from the trenches to recover as it was highly contagious and it was also pretty impossible to recover in the trenches unhygienic conditions. Recovery could take up to 12 weeks
No, no connection between the two whatsoever.
If you mean diseases, you could catch hypothermia, athletes foot, a terrible cold, cancer from wounds which have not been treated properly and loads others due to trench conditions as they were horrible!
The biggest danger from lice infestation is usually the discomfort and itching caused by their bites. In severe cases, excessive scratching can lead to skin infections. Lice do not transmit diseases, but they can be a nuisance and require prompt treatment to prevent spread.
A sickness called trench fever was caused by lice during World War 1. Trench fever started with severe pain all over the body and was followed by a high fever, headaches and giddiness. Trench fever took around 12 weeks to recover and that was AWAY from the trenches. Also Rats carried horrible diseases throughout the trench's and regularly ate what little supplies of food the soldiers had to eat.
Body lice spread disease. Lice itch. In the trench, there's not much movement (no showers, etc.).
Lice were a well known common menace for soldiers during World War I. Lice were responsible for a condition known as "Trench fever." The insects infected 97% of the soldiers and usually were found in the creases of the men's clothing.
they suffered with trench foot and the got lice
Not on its own. Trench fever is caused by lice, and lice (which are tiny blood-sucking insects) thrive in the unsanitary conditions of trenches. So it doesn't pass from person to person like a cold or a flu; it passes by the insects biting them.
No, lice and other things would trouble life in a trench.