· It starts with a headache.
· Then comes the chills and fever.
· This leaves you exhausted but it's not over yet.
· Nausea and vomiting are next up.
· Closely followed by back pains and aching in the arms and legs.
· Sometimes bright lights could be too much to stand.
· Within two days the swellings had appeared.
· The bumps were hard and painful, and could feel like they were burning.
· These bumps could appear under the arms, and on the inner legs.
· By then they could have swollen to the size of an orange.
· If you had any chance of recovering, it was now.
· Black boils and spots would be covering the body by now.
· And he/she would die after only a week of having the disease.
The three types of plague are: bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic.
There are three types:Bubonic plague has a1-15% mortality rate in treated cases and a 40-60% mortality rate in untreated cases.Septicemic plague has a 40% mortality rate in treated and 100% in untreated casesPneumonic plague has 100% mortality rate if not treated within 24 hours of infection.
There is bubonic, pneumonic and septicemic plague hope this helps :-)
The most serious one is death. However there are several types of plague so it would depend on which you mean.
It varied, as there was 2 types of plague, one killed u in 3 days the other in 5
There were three different types of plague, bubonic, pneumonic and septicemic. The main symptoms were headache, nausea, vomiting, fever, diarrhea and difficulty breathing.
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.
There were two types of the plague the bubonic plague and the pneumonic. The signs of having the bubonic plague were swellings in your armpits and groin. The signs of having the pneumonic plague were having breathing problems, you coughed up blood and you died more rapidly.
Not usually unless the person who had bubo had started developing septicaemic plague. septicaemic- this plague (there are three different types) affected the lungs and was transmitted from human to human.
Oftentimes it was the poor because of their unhygienic living conditions and compromised immune systems, but the Plague did not discriminate. It took the lives of people from all walks of life.
In addition to the bubonic plague, there are two other different diseases caused by the same organism, called the septicemic plague and the pneumonic plague. The bubonic plague is spread by rats and fleas; a person gets it by being bitten by an infected flea. The septicemic form is the same disease, except that it has spread into a person's blood stream, where it progresses more rapidly and is more likely to be lethal. If the plague gets into a person's lungs, then the form is the pneumonic plague, and it can be spread in the droplets in the air when that person coughs; another person can catch the pneumonic plague by breathing the air.
a plague of frogsthe great plague of eyam