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In press - Jan Frederik Gogarten
In press - Jan Frederik Gogarten

... unpredictably in humans and susceptible animal populations. While fruit bats have been implicated as a potential reservoir, many questions regarding ebola virus ecology remain. Particularly, factors promoting spillover from reservoirs into humans and susceptible animal populations remain elusive. Th ...
Tuberculosis - National Center for Farmworker Health
Tuberculosis - National Center for Farmworker Health

... The culturally-acceptable consumption of unpasteurized milk and cheese may result in subsequent exposure to Mycobacterium bovis, which is a bovine form of tuberculosis and can cause TB in humans.27 Research on dairy farm workers indicates that long exposure times to cattle may be the cause of a high ...
Pneumonia-What is the infection?
Pneumonia-What is the infection?

... toxicity for courses beyond 10 days] Lui C, Bayer A, Cosgrove SE, et al. Clinical practice guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America for the treatment of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections in adults and children. Clin Infect Dis. 2011;52:1-38. ...
occupational infections
occupational infections

... Legionelosis • Travellers who visit developed settings (e.g., hotels, even in developing countries) are exposed to aerosolized, warm water are at risk for infection. • Despite the presence of Legionella bacteria in many aquatic environments, the risk of developing legionellosis for most individuals ...
Thames Valley Priorities Committees
Thames Valley Priorities Committees

... Inosine Pranobex (Immonovir – Registered name with Newport Pharmaceuticals Ltd) is used for mucocutaneous herpes simplex, the adjunctive treatment of genital warts, and for sub-acute sclerosing pan-encephalitis, but is not the drug of first choice. There are several brand names. It has been found to ...
Full Text  - Archives of Clinical Infectious Diseases
Full Text - Archives of Clinical Infectious Diseases

... those who have been in contact with fresh blood and infected tissue. In house-keepers who are also likely to be exposed to contaminated meat, CCHF was also diagnosed (1,4-6). In our study, from 67 infected women all were house-keeper and all infected pregnant women had a history of chopping fresh me ...
Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP)
Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP)

... 1. Effusive (wet) Form – characterized by the build up of fluid within the chest or the abdomen.  2. Non‐effusive (Dry) Form – Characterized by the build up of pussy nodules in any body system or organ.  This  makes diagnosis very difficult because symptoms depend on which body organ is affected.    ...
Technical Fact Sheet
Technical Fact Sheet

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Presentation
Presentation

... described by focal serous or serous-haemorragic inflammation of a skin, fever and intoxication. Erysipelas is distributed everywhere. Morbidity in various climatic zones ranges 12 — 20 of cases for 10 thousand population per one year. More often women are sick. ...
The role of companion animals in the emergence of
The role of companion animals in the emergence of

... before the age of 4 weeks, female worms can become gravid and produce eggs when the pups are as young as 3 weeks of age. Furthermore, these eggs can remain infective in some environments for months or even years [16]. Toxocaral larva migrans has been reported to be the most common zoonotic parasitic ...
8. MICROBIOLOGY 1. Unscramble the words and add
8. MICROBIOLOGY 1. Unscramble the words and add

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Lung Cancer Questions
Lung Cancer Questions

...  Size, histology, and number of nodes influence prognosis  Squamous cell CA has far better prognosis than adenocarcinoma 27. What is recommended therapy for stage IIIA cancers, especially for N2 disease?  Complete resection with mediastinal node dissection 28. How should stage IIIB tumors be mana ...
Common diseases of gamebirds in Great Britain
Common diseases of gamebirds in Great Britain

... diarrhoea and death, mostly between the ages of 4 and 14 days. Grossly, there is distension of the intestinal tract and caeca by frothy yellow fluid. Secondary bacterial infections may cause pericarditis, perihepatitis, hepatomegaly or splenomegaly. Usually, gamebirds are affected by group A rotavir ...
SHAMPOOS, TATTOOS, AND BARBEQUES
SHAMPOOS, TATTOOS, AND BARBEQUES

... of hospitals responded to survey) • The primary sites of infection are skin/soft tissue (28%), lung (17%), bloodstream (13%), urinary tract (10%), and surgical site (8%). Approximately 70% are believed to be healthcare-associated (acquired during hospitalization) and most cases occurred outside the ...
IOSR Journal of Pharmacy and Biological Sciences (IOSR-JPBS)
IOSR Journal of Pharmacy and Biological Sciences (IOSR-JPBS)

... Pyogenic diseases refer to local inflammation, pus formation from accumulation of dead leukocytes and infectious agent. Systemically, an adequate blood supply is needed for wound healing. Pyogenic infections can occur in different forms; the purulent skin infections caused by bacterial contamination ...
Bacterial Infections
Bacterial Infections

... Pneumococcal pneumonia: Streptococcus pneumoniae is responsible for about 80% of all pneumonia cases. It usually starts after an URT viral infection damages the airways. Without appropriate antibiotic treatment, mortality is high, especially in the elderly. [FOM pp. 289–290] Primary atypical (walkin ...
IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences (IOSR-JDMS)
IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences (IOSR-JDMS)

... Hepatitis B virus can cause both acute and chronic infection.HBV is transmitted by exposure to infectious blood and body fluids.The virus is present in blood,serum, and wound exudates in high concentrations;in moderate concentrations in semen, vaginal secretions, and saliva ; and in low concentratio ...
BPRC Achievements - Biomedical Primate Research Centre
BPRC Achievements - Biomedical Primate Research Centre

... Medical research still requires the use of animals, since many of these studies can only be performed using non-human primates, mainly because they are so closely related to humans. Certain non-human primate species are the only ones that can be infected by the same pathogens that naturally infect h ...
ESHRE position statement concerning prion detection in urinary
ESHRE position statement concerning prion detection in urinary

... contributing samples for hCG extraction, who are pregnant women, are in the age range far before the age of 50 years, when the vast majority of CJD cases are diagnosed. Those contributing samples for FSH extraction are in the menopausal age range, when eventual clinical manifestation of CJD can be d ...
Goat Parasites
Goat Parasites

... • Fasciola hepatica – liver fluke – Complex life cycle involving mammals (adult flukes), snails as well as free living stages (metacercariae) – Leaf like parasite affecting liver of many animals – Seasonal disease: acute  chronic – Anemia, bottle jaw ...
Reston ebolavirus in Humans and Animals in the
Reston ebolavirus in Humans and Animals in the

... personal protection and animal quarantine should be applied to prevent human infections not only due to REBOV but to other infectious disease agents as well, provided adequate precautions are taken. The detection of REBOV in monkeys and (after more than a decade) in pigs signifies the ability of REB ...
RIPPED from the HEADLINES… - Mercy Medical Center Sioux City
RIPPED from the HEADLINES… - Mercy Medical Center Sioux City

... thereafter, and it was soon realized that this “new disease” was actually an old disease, but was not recognized as such. ...
Prevention of opportunistic infections in immunosuppressed patients
Prevention of opportunistic infections in immunosuppressed patients

... Direct stool examination for strongyloides larvae has a sensitivity of approximately 30 per cent if one stool is examined8 and 50 per cent for three stools.9 One study claimed sensitivity of close to 100 per cent if seven stools are examined.10 This is clearly impractical in our setting. Culture of ...
Protozoan diseases
Protozoan diseases

... disease, your assignments is to write a report about the disease. Include a short paragraph for each of the following topics… ...
Adult Medical-Surgical Nursing 2
Adult Medical-Surgical Nursing 2

... Entry of Pathogens Haemogenous (via blood circulation) following an infection usually of the upper respiratory tract (nasopharynx, mastoid, otitis media) (original droplet infection) Trauma (head injury) or neurosurgery Opportunistic infection in an immunocompromised patient (Pneumococcus and fungal ...
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Oesophagostomum



Oesophagostomum is a genus of free-living nematodes of the family Strongyloidae. These worms occur in Africa, Brazil, China, Indonesia and the Philippines. The majority of human infection with Oesophagostomum is localized to northern Togo and Ghana. Because the eggs may be indistinguishable from those of the hookworms (which are widely distributed and can also rarely cause helminthomas), the species causing human helminthomas are rarely identified with accuracy. Oesophagostomum, especially O. bifurcum, are common parasites of livestock and animals like goats, pigs and non-human primates, although it seems that humans are increasingly becoming favorable hosts as well. The disease they cause, oesophagostomiasis, is known for the nodule formation it causes in the intestines of its infected hosts, which can lead to more serious problems such as dysentery. Although the routes of human infection have yet to be elucidated sufficiently, it is believed that transmission occurs through oral-fecal means, with infected humans unknowingly ingesting soil containing the infectious filariform larvae.Oesophagostomum infection is largely localized to northern Togo and Ghana in western Africa where it is a serious public health problem. Because it is so localized, research on intervention measures and the implementation of effective public health interventions have been lacking. In recent years, however, there have been advances in the diagnosis of Oesophagostomum infection with PCR assays and ultrasound and recent interventions involving mass treatment with albendazole shows promise for controlling and possibly eliminating Oesophagostomum infection in northern Togo and Ghana.
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