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PPT 1
PPT 1

... usually lifelong immunity from further episodes of ...
SEROLOGICAL EVIDENCE OF EPIZOOTIC HAEMORRHAGIC
SEROLOGICAL EVIDENCE OF EPIZOOTIC HAEMORRHAGIC

... of the family Bunyaviridae and a member of the Simbu serogroup. It is closely related to the Akabane virus. This serogroup contains more than 24 viruses, most of which have been detected in ruminants. SBV is most probably transmitted by biting midges (Culicoides spp) and does not infect humans. SBV ...
Sheep and Goat Pox
Sheep and Goat Pox

... Isolate infected herds and sick animals for at least 45 days after recovery ...
8_Infectious_Diseases_
8_Infectious_Diseases_

... 3. When the host cell divides, virus is also copied 4. Under certain conditions, the virus will become active & takes over the cell functions like an Active Virus Can be months or years after Invasion Ex. Cold Sores activated by stress or heat ...
Chapter 18. Viral Genetics - Brookings School District
Chapter 18. Viral Genetics - Brookings School District

...  mRNA codes for viral components  host’s ribosomes produce new viral proteins transcription ...
BODY Diseases_405
BODY Diseases_405

... respiratory tract. The enzymes, known as proteases, cut the hemagglutinin in two, which enables the virus to gain entry into cells and begin to multiply. These proteases are common in the respiratory and digestive tracts but not elsewhere, which is why the flu causes primarily a respiratory illness ...
West Nile Virus - OSU CCME account
West Nile Virus - OSU CCME account

... ‒ Skeletal muscles, myotendinous insertions, joint capsules ‒ Triggers inflammatory cell infiltration • Disseminates to the CNS in animal models ‒ Meningeal and ependymal cells • Transmitted through maternal-fetal blood exchange during delivery ...
What are Viruses?
What are Viruses?

... • after viral components are made by the infected host cell, viral particles are released • often, the virus alters the intracellular environment enough to damage or kill the cell • if enough cells are destroyed, disease results ...
Prokaryotes - Stark home page
Prokaryotes - Stark home page

Bird Flu H5N1
Bird Flu H5N1

... by type A strains of the influenza virus. The disease, which was first identified in Italy more than 100 years ago, occur worldwide.  1918 outbreaks in Italy, a Pandemic, the virus was H1N1. ...
Viruses
Viruses

... remains dormant (not used) forhand years.if Raise your Environmental you think you pressure or extreme could getthe it stress canyou cause again??? virus to switch in to the lytic cycle. ...
coronaviruses-sars - Biomedic Generation
coronaviruses-sars - Biomedic Generation

... The virus uses cellular machinery to synthesize viral proteins. Several of these are long amino acid chains which must be cleaved by a specific viral protease before new viral particles can become active. Protease inhibitors block viral maturation at this step. ...
SC_Ch_21_Vocab - Caldwell County Schools
SC_Ch_21_Vocab - Caldwell County Schools

... 4. Pathogenic bacteria 5. How can bacteria be used to help people that are diabetic? (pg.616) 6. What is genetic engineering? (pg. 616) Sec 3 1. Virus (What are the most common types of viruses?) 2. Host 3. Name the 4 basic shapes of viruses. (pg.619) 4. Explain what happens during the lytic cycle o ...
Communicable_Diseases_8
Communicable_Diseases_8

... • Transmission of disease from mother to child • May cause death of fetus • Treatment early in the pregnancy is important as treponemas are less likely to pass through placenta during first few weeks of pregnancy • During early pregnancy: placental villi are covered by a double layer of epithelium a ...
Glandular Fever letter 6th class Dec 16
Glandular Fever letter 6th class Dec 16

... affects adolescents and young adults; infection in younger children is often mild, so mild sometimes that no-one recognises the child to be ill. Incubation is usually between 4 and 8 weeks. It may last for six weeks or more with swollen glands, fever and feeling generally unwell. Sometimes there is ...
12 Filoviruses
12 Filoviruses

... Marburgvirus (Africa only) Cause hemorrhagic fevers with high fatality rates (up to 90%) Infection appears to be by close contact with infected person Highly contagious First outbreak: 1967 (Marburg, Germany; Yugoslavia) Vaccine company was processing primary kidney cells from African green monkeys ...
Getah virus infection. Mair, T.S. and Timoney, P.J.
Getah virus infection. Mair, T.S. and Timoney, P.J.

... Getah virus is an arbovirus that was first isolated from mosquitoes (Culex gelidus) in Malaysia in 1955 (Berge 1975). However, it was not until 1978 that the virus was shown to be responsible for a mild disease among racehorses in Japan (Kamada et al. 1980; Sentsui and Kono 1980a; Timoney 2004). Sub ...
Circular of Information CBS to Begin using HCV RNA and HIV
Circular of Information CBS to Begin using HCV RNA and HIV

... Kits ...
8.1.3.A ChickenpoxOutbreak
8.1.3.A ChickenpoxOutbreak

... An epidemic is an infectious disease that spreads rapidly and sickens a large number of people. Throughout history, epidemics have had dramatic effects on human political and social history. The 1918 avian flu outbreak killed an estimated 30-50 million people worldwide and may have been the most dev ...
African Horse Sickness
African Horse Sickness

...  Followed by severe respiratory distress  Mild respiratory signs  Followed by edema and death  Diagnosed by necropsy ...
HAND, FOOT, AND MOUTH DISEASE
HAND, FOOT, AND MOUTH DISEASE

... and fingers of the hands and on the soles of the feet. The infection usually goes away without any serious problems. Rarely, may be a cause of viral meningitis (brain infection). ...
viral.Infections.in.the. Immunocompromised.. Patient:.Herpesviruses.
viral.Infections.in.the. Immunocompromised.. Patient:.Herpesviruses.

... common community-acquired viruses. For the purposes of this review, immunocompromised patients include recipients of solid organ transplants (SOT), bone marrow transplants (BMT), and hematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT); those on immunomodulator therapy; and patients with HIV infection. In par ...
Zika Virus - Manatee County Mosquito Control
Zika Virus - Manatee County Mosquito Control

... symptoms include headaches, skin rash, fever, pink eye, general malaise, and muscle/joint pain. Little is known about potential long term neurological effects of infection with Zika. Symptoms develop from two to 10 days after exposure and last approximately from 2 days to a week. ...
IMPORTANCE OF LIVESTOCK AND LIVESTOCK DISEASES IN
IMPORTANCE OF LIVESTOCK AND LIVESTOCK DISEASES IN

... They include ecological. environmental and demographic factors that place pigs in increased contact with a previously unfamiliar microbe or its natural host. provide potential pathogens with a novel host. or favour increased disseminalion. The factors are increasing in prevalence in Southeast Asia b ...
Viruses and Bacteria
Viruses and Bacteria

... Retrovirus - a virus that contains an RNA core that replicates by first transcribing its RNA into DNA (ex. HIV). This is the reverse of what happens normally during replication. Prion – somewhat like viruses, cause disease. Instead of nucleic acid they have a protein molecule that can cause disease ...
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Henipavirus



Henipavirus is a genus of RNA viruses in the family Paramyxoviridae, order Mononegavirales containing three established species: Hendra virus, Nipah virus and Cedar virus. The henipaviruses are naturally harboured by Pteropid fruit bats (flying foxes) and some microbat species. Henipavirus is characterised by a large genome, a wide host range, and their recent emergence as zoonotic pathogens capable of causing illness and death in domestic animals and humans.In 2009, RNA sequences of three novel viruses in phylogenetic relationship to known Henipaviruses were detected in Eidolon helvum (the African straw-colored fruit bat) in Ghana. The finding of these novel putative Henipaviruses outside Australia and Asia indicates that the region of potential endemicity of Henipaviruses extends to Africa.
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