It depends on the type: 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 cases
Pneumonic plague has 100% mortality rate if not treated within 24 hours of infection.
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.
The 'black death' is usually referenced to the bubonic plague in which fleas from rats infected many humans causing them severe sickness and resulted in death. The mortality rate for those infected with the bubonic plague was 30-75 percent.
The bubonic plague was called the Great Pestilence, Great Plague, or Great Mortality during the Middle Ages. Somewhat later it was called the Black Death. There is a link below.
There was very high mortality with the bubonic plague during 1348-1349. Never the less many patients did survive the deadly disease.
Bubonic plague has 1-15% 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 cases.Pneumonic plague has 100% mortality rate if not treated within 24 hours of infection.Estimates differ, but most historians believe that the Black Death killed half the population.In some places, like the village of West Thickley in County Durham, it killed everybody.The death-rate was especially bad in monasteries, where the monks stayed together and cared for each other.
Another name for the plague is the black death
To be cured from the Bubonic Plague you can use antibiodics. In the previous bubonic plagues when it was a plague there was no cure.
The Bubonic Plague
The black death is also known as 'The Black Plague' but the scientific name for it is the bubonic plague.
Today, when people say the plague as in a disease, they generally mean the bubonic plague. However, there are three types of plague: - bubonic - the kind with the swollen lymph nodes called buboes, that's where the name comes from - pneumonic - this is transmitted by coughing and people usually die within 2 days of showing symptoms - septicemic, which is in your blood and causes tissue to die. Pneumonic is far more contageous and kills quicker than the other two, so that's arguably the worst. If you mean the Plague as in the big pandemic that wiped out 1/3 of Europe in the 1350s, it was a mixture of bubonic and pneumonic.
The Pneumonic plague, (internal bubonic plague,) constricted your throat muscles.
the Bubonic Plague occurred in Europe about 400 years ago