Trench fever affected armies in
Flanders,
France,
Poland,
Galicia,
Italy,
Macedonia,
Mesopotamia,
Russia and
Egypt in
World War I. Three noted cases during WWI were the authors
J. R. R. Tolkien,
A. A. Milne, and
C. S. Lewis.
Discovery and taxonomy Trench fever was first described and reported by British Major John Graham in June 1915. He reported symptoms such as dizziness, headaches, and pain in the shins and back. The disease was most common in the military and consequently took much longer to identify than usual. These cases were originally confused for
dengue,
sandfly, or
paratyphoid fever. Because insects were the suspected vector of transmission,
Alexander Peacock published a study of the
body louse in 1916. Due in part to his findings, the louse was determined to be the primary cause of transmission by many, but this was still contested by multiple voices in the field, such as John Muir, who believed the disease was viral. In 1917, the Trench Fever Investigation Commission (TFIC) had its first meeting. The TFIC performed experiments with infected blood and lice and learned much about the disease and louse behavior. Also in 1917, the
American Red Cross started the Medical Research Committee (MRC). The MRC performed human experiments on trench fever, and their research was published in March 1918. The MRC and TFIC findings were very similar, essentially confirming the louse as the vector of transmission. The TFIC correctly implicated louse fecal contamination as the mode of transmission, rather than directly through louse bite. It was not until the 1960s that J. Vinson demonstrated that
Rickettsia quintana could be cultured extracellularly on blood agar and fulfilled
Koch's postulates. This led to the reclassification of
Rickettsia quintana as
Rochalimaea quintana and subsequently
Bartonella quintana. During
World War II, the British Government commissioned sheep dip manufacturer Cooper, McDougall & Robertson of
Berkhamsted, Herts, to develop a product which troops could use to ward off lice. After much trial and error, 'AL63' was developed and successfully used in a powder form. The initials stood for 'Anti-Louse', and it was the 63rd preparation which was the most efficacious. ==References==