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    • Heart valve disease

      • Carroll was one of the volunteers who put himself forward to be bitten by a mosquito "loaded" with yellow fever to see if he would contract the disease. He did contract the disease, but seemed to recover. However, he died of heart valve disease, thought to be a late complication of the yellow fever, in 1907.
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  1. › Date of death

    • September 16, 1907September 16, 1907
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  3. Although, Carroll recovered from the initial yellow fever infection, his heart was irreparably damaged, and he died just seven years later. Carroll was the inaugural president of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Virginia.

    • AAAS Resolution: Death of Dr. James Carroll from Yellow Fever Experimentation
    • Significance
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    Whereas, The late Major James Carroll, M.D., USA, was the first to submit voluntarily to the bite of an infected stegomyia, and from the bite of this mosquito, suffered a severe attack of yellow fever, the effects of which led to his ultimate death, and Whereas, This was the first experimentally produced case of yellow fever leading to the present ...

    Carroll's widow was awarded a pension of $125 a year by the government from the date of his death. So, too, was the widow of Dr. Jesse Lazear (1866–1900), another member of the board, who contracted and died of yellow fever early on in the investigation. Fortunately, none of the recruited volunteers died during the experiments with the mosquitoes. ...

    Books

    Lock, Stephen, John M. Last, and George Dunea, eds. The Oxford Illustrated Companion to Medicine. Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress, 2001.

    Periodicals

    Pierce, John R., and James V. Writer, eds. "Solving the Mystery of Yellow Fever: The 1900 U.S. Army Yellow Fever Board." Military Medicine166 supplement (2001): 1-82.

  4. Oct 30, 2006 · Concerned that the mosquito might die without a blood meal, he asked his colleague James Carroll if he would allow it to feed. Two days later Carroll fell ill. He appeared jaundiced.

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  5. 110 years ago today, Major James Carroll, a US Army Physician, “allowed an infected mosquito to feed on him in an attempt to isolate the means of transmission of yellow fever. Carroll developed a severe case of yellow fever, helping his colleague, Army pathologist Walter Reed , prove that mosquitoes transmit this often-deadly disease (from ...

  6. May 23, 2018 · Carroll, James. ( b. Woolwich, England, 5 June 1854; d. Washington, D. C., 16 September 1907), bacteriology. Carroll was the son of James and Harriet Chiverton Carroll. He attended Albion House Academy, Woolwich, in preparation for an engineering career in the navy. At the age of fifteen, however, he imigrated to Canada and in 1874, at the age ...

  7. Aug 27, 2008 · At the end of the 19th century, the United States invaded Cuba during its war with Spain. For every soldier who died in battle, 13 died of yellow fever. 4 Surgeon General George Sternberg sent Walter Reed, Aristides Agramonte, James Carroll, and Jesse Lazear to Cuba to investigate the cause of yellow fever.

  8. Sep 28, 2009 · The story reveals the efforts of scientists who struggled against immense odds to find a way to stop it spred. Most remarkable are the sacrifices made by American doctors including Walter Reed, James Carroll (Reed's assistant), Jesse Lazear, and Cuban-born physician Artistides Agramonte.

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