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COMMUNICABLE & NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES
COMMUNICABLE & NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES

15 Commun Disease Table
15 Commun Disease Table

... but they have not been shown to spread disease. Skin infestation caused by a human mite. Signs: severe itching, especially at night, small blister-like eruptions or short, wavy linear burrows in the skin (especially in finger webbing, wrists, elbows, armpits, waist, buttocks & genitalia. Viral disea ...
toxoplasmosis new
toxoplasmosis new

Diagnosis: Mycobacterium ulcerans Comment: Discovered in 1948
Diagnosis: Mycobacterium ulcerans Comment: Discovered in 1948

... patients in Bairnsdale. Found in 33 countries (WHO) , most commonly in West and Central Africa. The environmental reservoir and mode of transmission is unknown, with no person to person transmission. There is negligible risk outside endemic areas. Clincially lesions present as slow growing papules w ...
Epidemiology
Epidemiology

... Application of this study to control and prevent health problems in populations. ...
21 Micro lab
21 Micro lab

... and disseminates (spreads) to the blood and then to the CNS (central nervous system). It causes neurological damage in those who survive. The Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB) does not allow ...
“Flesh-Eating Disease” (Necrotizing Fasciitis)
“Flesh-Eating Disease” (Necrotizing Fasciitis)

... What is Flesh Eating Disease? Flesh-eating disease is also called necrotizing fasciitis. It is an infection that rapidly destroys tissue through the layers that surrounds muscles. If left untreated, it can cause death within 12 to 24 hours. It is estimated that there are between 90 and 200 cases per ...
TB Disease
TB Disease

... TB is caused by bacteria (germs) and is spread when a person with TB disease of the lungs coughs the germs into the air. People sharing that air may breathe in the germs and develop either... ...
Ebola outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern
Ebola outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern

... Use standard and transmission-based precautions for environmental cleaning. Seek urgent infectious diseases / clinical microbiology advice and urgently notify the CDCB to coordinate the management of contacts. Routine haematology and other tests should be minimised. Contact your local infectious dis ...
Chapter Nine – Nutrition Quiz Clues
Chapter Nine – Nutrition Quiz Clues

... Transmitted Infections; with Focus on Reducing Risks and Coping with Chronic Disease and Conditions Know what is the term used for disease causing agents (not virus, bacteria, or germs) ...
5.5 INTESTINAL PARASITES/HELMINTHS
5.5 INTESTINAL PARASITES/HELMINTHS

chapter 20 - Lange Textbooks
chapter 20 - Lange Textbooks

... 2. Progressive disease, usually occurring among elderly 3. Found worldwide, with an incidence of disease of one case per million per year 4. Natural mode of acquisition is unknown 5. Infection has also been transmitted by dura mater grafts, corneal transplants, by contact with contaminated electrode ...
human aFriCan trypanosomiasis (HAT)
human aFriCan trypanosomiasis (HAT)

... occurs in West and Central Africa, with about 98% of the total detected cases, while r-HAT occurs in East Africa. The number of persons affected has been steadily reducing since 1998 due to a comprehensive treatment access program led by the WHO. Twenty-one million people live in areas classified as ...
Blood and Tissue Protozoa of Dogs and Cats
Blood and Tissue Protozoa of Dogs and Cats

... Heartworm disease in the cat may involve some or all of the following: Pulmonary arterial, bronchial, and alveolar disease—Heartworm Associated Respiratory Disease (HARD)—is associated with the death of developing juvenile worms. Cats may present with cough, dyspnea, and/or wheezing. Death of adult ...
aids_and_the_eye.
aids_and_the_eye.

Tuberculosis, the disease, its treatment and prevention
Tuberculosis, the disease, its treatment and prevention

... with TB in this country were born abroad but immigration alone does not explain the recent rise in TB cases. Around 30 per cent of people born overseas who develop TB in this country have lived here for over ten years. The most important action to safeguard public health is to ensure that all TB cas ...
(TB) Contacts and TB Contacts - Minnesota Department of Health
(TB) Contacts and TB Contacts - Minnesota Department of Health

... No further evaluation needed. If initiated, window period treatment can be discontinued. Consider treatment for LTBI for HIV-infected contacts and educate patient about symptoms of TB disease. ...
Parasitic Infections
Parasitic Infections

... migration through the dermal-epidermal junction, advancing several cm/day. The larvae does not mature in humans and dies off in several weeks with resolution of skin lesions i. Dx: clinically established, skin biopsy ii. Tx: albendazole f. Visceral larva migrans- a syndrome caused by nematodes norma ...
What is an outbreak?
What is an outbreak?

... especially a harmful one. An outbreak is characterized by a disease's bypassing of measures to control it. ...
End TB Strategy - pulmonology kkm
End TB Strategy - pulmonology kkm

...  OFLOTUB/Gatifloxacin for TB Phase III trial: gatifloxacin substituted for ethambutol – 4 months Rx results expected second half 2013  ReMox: moxifloxacin substituted for ethambutol or isoniazid – 4 months Rx - results expected early ...
Sarcoptes scabiei var.suis 猪疥蟎第八组
Sarcoptes scabiei var.suis 猪疥蟎第八组

... in the ears ...
Spring 2015 Chapter 15
Spring 2015 Chapter 15

... Epidemiologic studiesDescriptive studies- concerned with the physical aspects of an existing disease and disease spread and records: 1) number of cases of a disease 2) the segments of a population that were affected and 3) the locations and time period of the cases. The age, gender, race, marital s ...
Goat Sheep Int Parasites FVSU
Goat Sheep Int Parasites FVSU

... where  they  can  be  consumed  during  grazing  thus  completing  the  cycle.  Spring  is  the  most  dangerous  time  for  animals  to become  infected with  worms. In the  summer  when it  is  hot, parasite  eggs  and larvae  may  not  survive  so well  on pasture. However, there  may  be  anothe ...
The immune system
The immune system

... from public environments and then grows in the warm and moist environment usually between the toes, and can be difficult to cure. ...
FS_Live_Poultry_Newcastle_disease_FVSU.pdf
FS_Live_Poultry_Newcastle_disease_FVSU.pdf

... The  causative  agent  is  Newcastle  disease  virus  (NDV),  also  known  as  avian  paramyxovirus­1  (APMV­1),  and  is  a  member  of  the  Genus  Avulavirus in the Family Paramyxoviridae. Newcastle disease viruses are  divided into two classification schemes, both are  reflective  of  virulence. ...
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Onchocerciasis



Onchocerciasis, also known as river blindness and Robles disease, is a disease caused by infection with the parasitic worm Onchocerca volvulus. Symptoms include severe itching, bumps under the skin, and blindness. It is the second most common cause of blindness due to infection, after trachoma.The parasite worm is spread by the bites of a black fly of the Simulium type. Usually many bites are required before infection occurs. These flies live near rivers, hence the name of the disease. Once inside a person, the worms create larvae that make their way out to the skin. Here they can infect the next black fly that bites the person. There are a number of ways to make the diagnosis including: placing a biopsy of the skin in normal saline and watching for the larva to come out, looking in the eye for larvae, and looking within the bumps under the skin for adult worms.A vaccine against the disease does not exist. Prevention is by avoiding being bitten by flies. This may include the use of insect repellent and proper clothing. Other efforts include those to decrease the fly population by spraying insecticides. Efforts to eradicate the disease by treating entire groups of people twice a year is ongoing in a number of areas of the world. Treatment of those infected is with the medication ivermectin every six to twelve months. This treatment kills the larva but not the adult worms. The medication doxycycline, which kills an associated bacterium called Wolbachia, appears to weaken the worms and is recommended by some as well. Removal of the lumps under the skin by surgery may also be done.About 17 to 25 million people are infected with river blindness, with approximately 0.8 million having some amount of loss of vision. Most infections occur in sub-Saharan Africa, although cases have also been reported in Yemen and isolated areas of Central and South America. In 1915, the physician Rodolfo Robles first linked the worm to eye disease. It is listed by the World Health Organization as a neglected tropical disease.
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