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Infectious Canine Hepatitis Infectious Canine Hepatitis
Infectious Canine Hepatitis Infectious Canine Hepatitis

... A presumptive diagnosis can be made based on vaccination history, clinical signs, and laboratory findings. Conclusive diagnosis can be made when two separate blood samples (taken on different days) show a rise in antibody level to ICH virus. Treatment Most dogs infected with ICH will recover with go ...
Diseases from Wildlife
Diseases from Wildlife

... from a safe distance. to own any wild animals or non-human primates Touching wild animals may (monkeys) without a permit. However, people sometimes harm you or the animal. come into contact with these animals. Like other animals, wild animals and primates can get diseases. Some of these diseases, ca ...
Bloodborne Pathogens
Bloodborne Pathogens

... May lead to chronic liver disease, liver cancer, and death HBV can survive for at least one week in dried blood Symptoms can occur 1-9 months after exposure The vaccination series are available through the district at no cost to you (Occupationally Exposed). ...
Blood and Lymphatic Infections
Blood and Lymphatic Infections

... Infects at early age without producing symptoms producing immunity More affluent populations missed exposure and lack immunity ...
Hand, Foot, Mouth Disease (HFMD)
Hand, Foot, Mouth Disease (HFMD)

... Infected people are most contagious during the first week of the illness, but the virus can remain in the body for weeks after a person’s symptoms are gone. This means that infected people can still pass the infection to others even though they may appear well. How is HFMD diagnosed? A health care p ...
BOVINE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM -- Lectures 1-2
BOVINE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM -- Lectures 1-2

14 Paramyxoviruses
14 Paramyxoviruses

... Joint pain may last up to 3 weeks ...
ImmunIsatIon Is for lIfe
ImmunIsatIon Is for lIfe

... people, especially small children, may not show any symptoms even though they may have the virus and can pass it onto others. yyWhile most people recover fully, it sometimes leads to death from overwhelming infection of the liver. ...
Perinatal Infectious Diseases
Perinatal Infectious Diseases

Mikrobiology - GEOCITIES.ws
Mikrobiology - GEOCITIES.ws

... oportunistic flora - normally living in organism, but in some special ocasions can became a patogen - E. coli transcient flora - periodically occurs in organism, but as patogen act just in some special locations - S. pneumoniae Infectious disease - caused by microorganism or by it´s toxin Factors of ...
Communicable Disease Guide for Schools and Child Care Settings
Communicable Disease Guide for Schools and Child Care Settings

... RSV infection is a common respiratory illness that can affect persons of any age. RSV infections generally occur in the United States from November to April. RSV is the most common cause of bronchiolitis (inflammation of the small airways in the lung) and pneumonia in children under 1 year of age in ...
1. Precaution Bloodborne Pathogens means pathogenic
1. Precaution Bloodborne Pathogens means pathogenic

... This  risk  is  well  understood  and  illustrated  by  the  reactivation  of  herpes  viruses  from   latency,  the  inadvertent  transmission  of  disease  to  organ  recipients,  and  the  persistence  of   human  immunodeficiency  virus ...
in accordance with m
in accordance with m

... Bordetella pertussis, B. bronchiseptica, B. holmseii and B. parapertussis ...
Simple Infection Model
Simple Infection Model

... alpha function; however depending on the disease, it may be advantageous to model alpha by age. For example, malaria and measles exhibit greater mortality in infants. ...
Sameer_4
Sameer_4

... The Virus persists in an occult, or cryptic, from most of the time. There will be intermittent flare-ups of clinical disease , Infectious virus can be recovered during flare-ups . Latent virus infections typically persist for the entire life of the host ...
Slapped cheek syndrome - NHS Ayrshire and Arran.
Slapped cheek syndrome - NHS Ayrshire and Arran.

... infectiosum’. It is caused by a virus called ‘erythrovirus’ (previously known as parvovirus B19). It is usually mild, occurring in small outbreaks among children. ...
Monoclonal Antibody to HIV-2 gp36 - Purified
Monoclonal Antibody to HIV-2 gp36 - Purified

... form of HIV. Both HIV1 and HIV2 have the same modes of transmission and are associated with similar opportunistic infections and AIDS. In persons infected with HIV2, immunodeficiency seems to develop more slowly and to be milder, but as the disease advances, HIV2 infectiousness seems to increase. Li ...
Ebola - Oxford Reference
Ebola - Oxford Reference

... than 550 people infected, 430 died. In 1979 in Sudan, thirty-four people were diagnosed with the virus, and twenty-two of them died. During a 1995 outbreak in Kikwit, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, about 250 out of 315 infected people died. Outbreaks occurred early in the twenty-first cent ...
african_horse_sickness_3_pathogenesis
african_horse_sickness_3_pathogenesis

... incubation period of AHS varies between five and seven days, but it may be as short as two days and is rarely longer than ten days. After infection, initial multiplication of virus occurs in the regional lymph nodes and is followed by a primary viraemia with subsequent infection of target organs, na ...
DNA-viruses
DNA-viruses

... • infects lymphoid tissue & salivary glands • transmission – direct oral contact & contamination with saliva ...
infection control - Women`s and Children`s Hospital
infection control - Women`s and Children`s Hospital

... 80% of hospital acquired infections are thought to be transmitted by hands Wash hands thoroughly if you come into contact with a patient and/or bodily fluids Cover all cuts and grazes ...
Leptospirosis by Dr Sarma
Leptospirosis by Dr Sarma

... Autumn Fever ...
Valencia College
Valencia College

... • Reactivation occurs with fever, severe stress, sun exposure or other trauma to either the skin or the nerves • Most HSV-1 sufferers have 3-4 outbreaks per year ...
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Sexually Transmitted Infections

... Outbreaks can be severe in people with weakened immune systems Makes people more at risk to HIV infection Makes HIV+ people more infectious ...
Horses, humans and Hendra virus
Horses, humans and Hendra virus

... Hendra virus again demonstrated its zoonotic capacity with the infection of two veterinary clinic staff (one fatally) in an outbreak in a Brisbane equine referral veterinary practice in 2008. Bats are recognised as the natural host of the virus. Hendra virus, a large, pleomorphic, enveloped, ribonuc ...
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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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