Bubonic and septicemic plague are two of the three types of plague. The main difference between the two is that the bubonic plague cause extreme infection and swelling of the lymph nodes while the septicemic plague cause the body's clotting mechanism to stop.
The Bubonic plague killed one third of Europe and much of Asia. I'm not sure there was such a thing as the "Numonic" plague. There is, however, something called pneumonic plague, which is a lung disease.
There were two forms of plague, one Bubonic and the other Pneumonic. Pneumonic was not currable.
The Pneumonic plague, (internal bubonic plague,) constricted your throat muscles.
The three types of plague are: bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic.
Bubonic and pneumonic plague :-)
There is bubonic, pneumonic and septicemic plague hope this helps :-)
You got it through a rat flea that infected you.
The plague that attacked the lungs was the pneumonic plague, a particularly devastating form of the bubonic plague. There is a link below.
Smallpox,influenza,bubonic plague,pneumonic plague because they lacked immunity.
There are three major forms of the disease: bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic.
The bubonic plague seems to be gone. Pneumonic plague, a less severe illness, is rare.
Historically, there are three primary types of plague caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis: bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic. Bubonic plague is characterized by swollen lymph nodes called buboes, septicemic plague affects the bloodstream, and pneumonic plague infects the lungs. Each type varies in transmission and severity, with pneumonic being the most contagious. These forms can occur simultaneously in severe cases.