S. recurrentis is the cause of European relapsing fever, and a number of possible varieties of it are associated with relapsing fevers in other parts of the world. Such spirochætes only differ by biological reactions, such as acquired immunity tests. They include:—
S. rossii, the agent of East African relapsing fever; S. novyi, the agent of North American relapsing fever; S. carteri, the agent of Indian relapsing fever; S. berbera, the agent of North African and Egyptian relapsing fever.
Other Human Spirochætes are:—
S. schaudinni. This organism, according to Prowazek, is the agent of ulcus tropicum. It varies in length from 10 µ to 20 µ.
S. aboriginalis has been found in cases of granuloma inguinale in British New Guinea and Western Australia. It also occurs in dogs, and may not be truly parasitic.
S. vincenti. This spirochæte is 12 µ to 25 µ in length, tapers at both ends and has few coils. It has been associated with angina vincenti. It often occurs in company with fusiform bacilli.
S. bronchialis, found by Castellani in 1907 in cases of bronchitis in Ceylon. The parasites are delicate, but show morphological variation. This organism is important and has since been found in the West Indies, India, Philippine Islands and various parts of Africa, such as the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, Uganda and West Africa. It has recently been the subject of research by Chalmers and O’Farrell, Taylor, and Fantham.
S. phagedenis was found by Noguchi in a ten days old ulcerated swelling of the labium. The organism shows much variation in size, being 4 µ to 30 µ in length.
S. refringens (Schaudinn, 1905) occurs in association with Treponema pallidum in syphilitic lesions, but is non-pathogenic. It is 20 µ to 35 µ long and 0·5 µ to 0·75 µ broad, being larger than T. pallidum and more easily stained.
Various spirochætes have also been notified in vomits, chiefly in Australia; others from the human intestinal tract, e.g., S. eurygyrata; S. stenogyrata (Werner); S. hachaizæ (Kowalski), in cholera motions; S. buccalis (Cohn, 1875) and S. dentium occurring in the human mouth and in carious teeth (S. dentium, Koch, 1877, being the smaller); S. acuminata and S. obtusa found by Castellani in open sores in cases of yaws.