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Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

... The cause of lung parenchymal disease should be identified because it is likely to dictate treatment. Patients with pneumonia are usually systemically ill. Fever, dehydration, leukocytosis with an inflammatory left shift, and inflammatory airway cytology are all signs of pulmonary infection. In addi ...
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... – ______________________ combines with cell DNA                           =                         PROVIRUS!  ...
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... Virus-free GLH adults given 4-day acquisition access feeding on source plants were transferred to 10day-old TN1 seedlings at 2 insects/seedling for 4-day inoculation access. The inoculated plants did not develop disease symptoms (Table 1). Second-instar nymphs from a virus-free BPH colony were relea ...
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... Bruises start appearing all over your body and your eyes turn red. Your personality will change again to an angrier state. Blood clots start forming inside of you. This causes dead spots to appear in many of your organs. Your skin appears to have one continuous bruise and becomes soft and pulpy. You ...
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Canine distemper



Canine distemper (sometimes termed hardpad disease in canine) is a viral disease that affects a wide variety of animal families, including domestic and wild species of dogs, coyotes, foxes, pandas, wolves, ferrets, skunks, raccoons, and large cats, as well as pinnipeds, some primates, and a variety of other species. It was long believed that animals in the family Felidae, including many species of large cat as well as domestic cats, were resistant to canine distemper, until some researchers reported the prevalence of CDV infection in large felids. It is now known that both large Felidae and domestic cats can be infected, usually through close housing with dogs or possibly blood transfusion from infected cats, but such infections appear to be self-limiting and largely without symptoms.In canines, distemper impacts several body systems, including the gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts and the spinal cord and brain, with common symptoms that include high fever, eye inflammation and eye/nose discharge, labored breathing and coughing, vomiting and diarrhea, loss of appetite and lethargy, and hardening of nose and footpads. The viral infection can be accompanied by secondary bacterial infections and can present eventual serious neurological symptoms.Canine distemper is caused by a single-stranded RNA virus of the family paramyxovirus (the same family of the distinct virus that causes measles in humans). The disease is highly contagious via inhalation and fatal 50% of the time.Template:Where? Despite extensive vaccination in many regions, it remains a major disease of dogs, and is the leading cause of infectious disease death in dogs.
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