| Literature DB >> 27928980 |
Michael P Barrett1, Federica Giordani1.
Abstract
Dr David Livingstone died on May 1st 1873. He was 60 years old and had spent much of the previous 30 years walking across large stretches of Southern Africa, exploring the terrain he hoped could provide new environments in which Europeans and Africans could cohabit on equal terms and bring prosperity to a part of the world he saw ravaged by the slave trade. Just days before he died, he wrote in his journal about the permanent stream of blood that he was emitting related to haemorrhoids and the acute intestinal pain that had left him incapable of walking. What actually killed Livingstone is unknown, yet the years spent exploring sub-Saharan Africa undoubtedly exposed him to a gamut of parasitic and other infectious diseases. Some of these we can be certain of. He wrote prolifically and described his encounters with malaria, relapsing fevers, parasitic helminths and more. His graphic writing allows us to explore his own encounters with tropical diseases and how European visitors to Africa considered them at this time. This paper outlines Livingstone's life and his contributions to understanding parasitic diseases.Entities:
Keywords: African exploration; Dr Livingstone; Parasitology; Tropical medicine; helminthology; malaria; quinine; schistosomiasis; tampan tick; tsetse fly
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27928980 PMCID: PMC5964472 DOI: 10.1017/S003118201600202X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitology ISSN: 0031-1820 Impact factor: 3.234
Fig. 1.David Livingstone, photographed by Thomas Annan in 1864. Used by kind permission of Flickr The Commons.
Fig. 2.Livingstone's rousers. The quinine, rhubarb and jalap mixture that Livingstone concocted was later marketed by the Pharmaceutical Company Burroughs Wellcome & Co. This bottle is on display at the David Livingstone Centre in Blantyre. A cast of the bone broken in a lion attack is in the foreground.
Fig. 3.The frontispiece of ‘Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa’ by Livingstone.