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Immunity of Mice to Intranasal Infection after Intraperitoneal
Immunity of Mice to Intranasal Infection after Intraperitoneal

... infected intranasally with 0.05 cc. of full strength culture virus; other groups of ten each received0.05 co. of culture diluted 1 : 10, 1 : 100, 1 : 1,000, and 1 : 10,000, respectively. Thus, mice vaccinated with a given concentration of virus were tested for immunity with graded amounts containing ...
Arboviruses
Arboviruses

... Rubella (German measles) is a common mild disease characterized by a rash. It affects children and adolescents worldwide and can also affect young adults. When rubella virus infects susceptible women early in pregnancy, it may be transmitted to the fetus and may cause birth defects. Therefore, accur ...
Variable region of the 39 UTR is a critical virulence factor in the Far
Variable region of the 39 UTR is a critical virulence factor in the Far

EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE
EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE

...  Hepatitis  Other viral hemorrhagic fevers ...
Poliomyelitis
Poliomyelitis

... Poliomyelitis is a viral infection caused by any of three serotypes of human poliovirus and is most often recognized by the acute onset of flaccid paralysis. It affects primarily children under the age of 5 years. Transmission is primarily person-to-person spread, principally through the fecal-oral ...
Modeling spatial spread of communicable diseases
Modeling spatial spread of communicable diseases

Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Sexually Transmitted Diseases

... ual contact but can be passed to an infant during childbirth if the virus is actively being shed from the genital tract. Most cases of HSV-2 infection are subclinical, manifesting as truly asymptomatic or symptomatic but unrecognized infections. These subclinical infections can occur in people who h ...
Systemic Viral Infections and Ocular Complications Systemic
Systemic Viral Infections and Ocular Complications Systemic

... *Sozen E, Avunduk AM, Akyol N. Comparsion of efficacy of oral valacyclovir and topical acyclovir in the treatment of herpes simplex keratitis: a randomized clinical trial. Chemotherapy 52, 29–31 (2006). ...
Slide 1 - UAB School of Optometry
Slide 1 - UAB School of Optometry

... Microbiology: Human Herpesviruses Kimberly Watkins pg. 3 Slide 14: The virus attaches to the target cell by the interaction of a number of glycoproteins. It interacts with the cell surface proteoglycans and some specific receptors that are members of the nectin family. A lot of the tropism for all ...
Avian infectious laryngotracheitis
Avian infectious laryngotracheitis

... but are most consistently observed in the larynx and trachea. Tissue changes in tracheal and laryngeal tissues may be mild, consisting only of excess mucus (39), or severe, with haemorrhage and/or diphtheritic changes. In mild forms of ILT, gross lesions may consist only of conjunctivitis, sinusitis ...
Equine Encephalitis Fast Fact
Equine Encephalitis Fast Fact

... becoming infected with EEE, WEE, and VEE by taking measures to decrease mosquito exposure and prevent mosquito bites such as using mosquito repellent (that contains DEET) and avoiding outdoor activities when mosquitoes are most active (dusk and dawn). ...
Hepatitis C virus - HAL
Hepatitis C virus - HAL

... Although all three groups used JFH1-derived HCV full-length clones for synthesis of viral particles, the studies differed in the hepatoma cell lines used. Whereas Wakita and colleagues transfected and infected native Huh7 cells as well as a highly permissive Huh7derived cell clone, the Rice and Chis ...
Hepatitis - Canadian Association of University Teachers
Hepatitis - Canadian Association of University Teachers

... cirrhosis and then, after 30 to 40 years, possibly to liver cancer. At present, there is no way of curing carriers. ...
Causes and spread of infection
Causes and spread of infection

... Before you can prevent an infection, it is important to understand how they are spread. Infections are caused by bacteria, viruses and other microscopic organisms. These germs are found in the environment (water, soil, air) as well as in and on humans, in our body secretions (stool) and in the tiny ...
Bacterial Meningitis
Bacterial Meningitis

... Fortunately, none of the bacteria that caused meningitis are as contagious as diseases like the common cold or the flu, and they are not spread by casual contact or by simply breathing the air where a person with meningitis has been. The germs live naturally in the back of our noses and throats, but ...


... detected in plasma and/or urine of renal allograft recipients. BK viruria was detected in 45 patients (30 %), were as BK viremia was detected in only 13 patients (8.6 %). Statistical analysis of these 45 cases is shown in table no 1. Out of these 13 patients only two patients showed graft dysfunctio ...
Simultaneous detection of vaccinal and field infectious bursal
Simultaneous detection of vaccinal and field infectious bursal

... Ivan DOBROSAVLJEVIĆ1, Dejan VIDANOVIĆ2, Maja VELHNER3*, Biljana MILJKOVIĆ4 and Branislav LAKO5 ...
Bloodborne infections - Scioto County Medical Society
Bloodborne infections - Scioto County Medical Society

... HBV becomes chronic in ~ 20% of infected patients. ...
Nepovirus Tomato black ring virus
Nepovirus Tomato black ring virus

... The nematode vector, Longidorus elongatus, is present in the United States (Arkansas, California, Oregon) (CABI, 2015a; Chitambar, 2015). There are also many hosts of TBRV which are present throughout the United States. For example, strawberry is primarily grown in California, which accounts for abo ...
The Substantia Nigra is a Major Target for Neurovirulent Influenza A
The Substantia Nigra is a Major Target for Neurovirulent Influenza A

... Clinical and immunohistochemical studies were done for 3-39 d on mice after intracerebral inoculation with the neurovirulent A/WSN/33 (H1N1; WSN) strain of influenza A virus, the nonneurovirulent A/Aichi/2/68 (H3N2; Aichi) strain, and two reassortant viruses between them. The virus strains with the ...
Seroprevalence of Syphilis Infections among Male Blood Donors at
Seroprevalence of Syphilis Infections among Male Blood Donors at

Chloroquine could be used for the treatment of filoviral infections
Chloroquine could be used for the treatment of filoviral infections

... Although the mechanisms of action of chloroquine clearly indicate that it might inhibit filoviral infections, several clinical trials that attempted to use chloroquine in the treatment of other acute viral infections – including dengue and influenza A and B – caused by low pH-dependent viruses, have r ...
Blood Rules - Football NSW
Blood Rules - Football NSW

... Symptoms of hepatitis B include loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, pain in the abdomen and/or joints, fever and jaundice. Normally these symptoms disappear in a few weeks. Some people who are infected with hepatitis B do not get ill and some show no symptoms at all. A small number, about 10% who lo ...
Chromosome Y Regulates Survival Following Murine
Chromosome Y Regulates Survival Following Murine

... ences in neonatal and/or adult testosterone levels, thereby impacting susceptibility to CVB3-induced mortality. To test our hypothesis, we compared the SDP of Sry polymorphisms with the SDP of CVB3-induced mortality. The B6-ChrY consomic lines can be separated into two categories based on the evolut ...
Q: What is meningitis? - Cherokee Public Health
Q: What is meningitis? - Cherokee Public Health

... Q: What is viral meningitis? A: Meningitis is an inflammation of the membranes ("meninges") that cover the brain and spinal cord. Viral infections are the most common cause of meningitis; bacterial infections are the second most common cause. Other, rarer causes of meningitis include fungi, parasite ...
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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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