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Stanford Archives
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when leland stanford junior
first came down with the
symptoms of typhoid fever in the winter of 1884, his
parents fretted but didn’t panic. The boy’s case
was mild, doctors said, and typhoid was just one of many
infectious
diseases endemic among children and adolescents in the
19th century. Most healthy youngsters with the diarrheal
bug eventually
recovered on their own and developed immunity.
Still,
there were grounds for concern. Before the development
of modern antibiotics in the late 1940s, typhoid could
be a nasty killer with no respect for rank. Queen Victoria’s
husband, Albert, died suddenly of the disease in 1861
at the age of 42. During the Boer War, some 13,000 British
soldiers
succumbed to the food- and water-borne illness, more
than all who died in battle. “In the Crimean War it
was terrible,” says James Gamble, a Stanford professor
of orthopedic surgery who has written several journal
articles on 19th-century medicine. “Epidemics would
come whenever there were wars, movements of population
or even concentrations
of people in general.”
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Stanford Archives
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Gamble, whose unusual expertise
in Victorian maladies grew out of a love for Dickens’ novels,
says physicians were pretty good at diagnosing typhoid fever
in the late
1800s and could distinguish it from similar febrile diseases
such as malaria and typhus. They were less sure about
how the disease was transmitted. The typhoid bacillus
Salmonella typhi was first observed in 1880, “but whether
bacteria caused the condition was still debatable,” Gamble
notes. “Some
physicians still thought typhoid could be caused by foul
air, what they called miasma.”
Today it seems clear
that Leland Junior’s fatal illness
came from contaminated food or water consumed during
his lengthy walkabouts in Turkey or Greece. Leland’s
tutor, Herbert Nash, later recalled that the boy was
uncharacteristically quiet on the ride home from a sightseeing
trip to the
ruins
of the Temple of Eleusis and complained of a sore throat
and headache. Later, on the train to Naples, Leland stretched
out on the seat and slept. By the time the Stanfords
arrived in Florence about three weeks later, the bacteria
had invaded
young Leland’s intestinal lining.
Gamble thinks the
physicians who attended Leland Junior may have prescribed “balm
water”—basically
holy water spiked with a little ammonia and orange peel.
Nineteenth-century medical textbooks also were big on
meat broth and “lavements,” elixirs made of stomach-soothing
herbs like chamomile. Aside from those measures and wrapping
the feverish boy in ice-cold sheets, there was little
doctors could do. “Traveling back then was not like
it is now; it was strenuous at best,” Gamble notes. “The
trains were primitive. The wagons didn’t have springs;
they didn’t have heating or air conditioning. . . .
I have a hunch that Leland Stanford Junior’s resistance
was low. His body was trying to fight the disease, but
the bacteria just got the upper hand.”
These days, typhoid
fever kills fewer than 1 percent of patients who receive
proper antibiotic treatment. Yet
the disease still claims about 600,000 victims each
year in developing countries. |