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Rickettsia prowazekii
Rickettsia prowazekii

Pathogenesis of HBV Infections Acute Infection
Pathogenesis of HBV Infections Acute Infection

... during the acute phase. • Symptoms include decreased appetite, fatigue, abdominal pain, jaundice and itching. • HCV is detected in blood within 1-3 weeks after infection using PCR technique. • Antibodies are detectable within 3-15 weeks. • Viral clearance rates are highly variable, 10-60% of infecte ...
here - St Josephs Catholic Primary School
here - St Josephs Catholic Primary School

... • Caused by a virus. • Fever, swelling of one or more salivary glands in the neck. Adult males can develop orchitis. • Mumps virus can cause meningitis and deafness. • Passed from one person to another via droplets (sneezing, coughing) or direct contact with saliva. • Incubation normally 18 days but ...
here
here

Canine Distemper Virus
Canine Distemper Virus

... Canine distemper is a disease of dogs that occurs worldwide and is caused by CDV. The virus invades via the mucosal route, and multiplies in the lymphoid system. In the acute disease, CDV causes fever and leucopenia that accompany mucosal inflammation. The resulting symptoms include coughing and shi ...
Acute viral infections
Acute viral infections

... • headache, fever, stiff neck, CSF pleocytosis • Most common cause of viral meningitis: enteroviruses, ...
Parvovirus - Genesis Midwives
Parvovirus - Genesis Midwives

108回国家試験 角田郁生 2016年7月5日
108回国家試験 角田郁生 2016年7月5日

... of tongue, gums, hooves; resembles FMDV; can infect humans associated with animals causing flu-like mild disease Lyssavirus – Spread by bloodstream contact with infected animal fluids (saliva in animal bite or inhalation of wastes) Rabies – only mammals are significant hosts; slow incubation leading ...
ASEPSIS - Chipola College | Home
ASEPSIS - Chipola College | Home

...  Standard precautions – precautions used in the care of all hospitalized persons. Applies to blood, all body fluids, secretions and excretions except sweat, nonintact skin, and mucous membranes  Transmission based precautions – precautions used in addition to standard precautions for clients in ho ...
myoclonus - Pediatric Neurology Briefs
myoclonus - Pediatric Neurology Briefs

Nestling disease in Budgerigars and its connection with the problem of
Nestling disease in Budgerigars and its connection with the problem of

... 1. Nestling disease in Budgerigars.  a.) Pathogen: The causative virus is a small virus without an envelope that is very resistant and infectious for long periods of time not only in the environment, but also in the bird room or aviary as well as on cages and equipment. It survives temperatures of ...
microbiology ch 41[9-4
microbiology ch 41[9-4

... o Latent infections established in peripheral ganglia o Complications: cerebellar ataxia in otherwise healthy children and encephalitis in immunocompromised  Zoster lesions (shingles) – appear clustered on body surface along dermatome o Neurological Sx (primarily pain) much more severe than for HSV ...
a. Herpes Simplex Type 1
a. Herpes Simplex Type 1

... 3. Vascular endothelial cells can be infected and support viral latency ...
Introduction to Environmentally Transmitted Pathogens, Part 1
Introduction to Environmentally Transmitted Pathogens, Part 1

chapter24a
chapter24a

... Pathogenesis Usually contracted by inhalation of airborne organisms Bacteria are taken up by pulmonary macrophages in the lungs Resists destruction within phagocyte Organism prevents the fusion of phagosome with lysosomes; allows multiplication in protected vacuole ...
File - Mr. B. Hanson
File - Mr. B. Hanson

... • Aka venereal warts & genital warts • Caused by a virus • 20 million people have the disease • 1 million new cases each year • #1 cause of cervical cancer in women • There are many different types. 30 are sexually transmitted. ...
CURRENT UPDATE on the EBOLA VIRUS OUTBREAK
CURRENT UPDATE on the EBOLA VIRUS OUTBREAK

... and again in 2004 following laboratory accidents. In each outbreak, there was only one case and each died. In 1996, a nursing sister in Johannesburg died of Ebola following exposure to the blood of a clinician who had travelled from Gabon and who subsequently turned out to be infected with the virus ...
Herpes Simplex Virus Type-1
Herpes Simplex Virus Type-1

Interventions for Clients with Infectious Problems of the Respiratory
Interventions for Clients with Infectious Problems of the Respiratory

feline infectious diseases
feline infectious diseases

... Feline Corona Virus is a highly contagious virus which is spread in saliva and faeces. In most cats there may be no signs or a mild transient diarrhoea. However a very small proportion of infected cats may develop Feline Infectious Peritonitis which can lead to abdominal swelling and other signs. On ...
Occupational Health and Safety Training Program
Occupational Health and Safety Training Program

... with the bird’s body secretions, or feces. In humans, the symptoms include fever, headache, muscle pain, chills, and may progress to pneumonia, liver, heart, and brain inflammation. USDA regulations require that testing be performed on all psittacine birds imported from foreign countries during an i ...
Meningoencephalitis in splenectomized patient caused by
Meningoencephalitis in splenectomized patient caused by

... changes are identified especially in older patients (12). Concurrent infections of the central nervous system with microorganisms of quite different taxa are extremely rare. Infections have been described with two bacterial species(13), but CNS infections caused by concurrent bacterial and viral mic ...
pub3191TomatoSpottedWiltHIGHRES / 3.18MB
pub3191TomatoSpottedWiltHIGHRES / 3.18MB

... Tomato spotted wilt is a major viral disease of tomato, pepper, tobacco, several field crops and a variety of ornamental hosts in the southeastern United States. This disease is generally a problem only on spring crops, and the incidence of the disease varies from year to year based in part on weath ...
Systemic dissemination of MCMV HaNa1 via non
Systemic dissemination of MCMV HaNa1 via non

... Laboratory of Virology, Department of Virology, Parasitology, and Immunology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ghent University, Merelbeke, Belgium Abstract The oronasal route is the most common way for infection of cytomegaloviruses (CMVs) in mammals, but it remains unclear how an oronasal exposure ...
Breaking the chain of infection
Breaking the chain of infection

... Susceptible host The human body has natural defences to prevent pathogens entering via the portals of entry described above, but some people get sick anyway. People who are susceptible hosts lack the immunity to overcome invasion by microorganisms. ...
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Lymphocytic choriomeningitis



Lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCM), is a rodent-borne viral infectious disease that presents as aseptic meningitis, encephalitis or meningoencephalitis. Its causative agent is the Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Virus (LCMV), a member of the family Arenaviridae. The name was coined by Charles Armstrong in 1934.
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