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THE PATHOGENICITY OF AN ISOLATE OF INFECTIOUS BURSAL
THE PATHOGENICITY OF AN ISOLATE OF INFECTIOUS BURSAL

... sera also gave negative results. In both tests positive controls gave positive results within 36 hr. ...
Dr. Jing Qian, Ph.D
Dr. Jing Qian, Ph.D

... A. Patients infected with HIV typically form antibodies against both the envelope glycoproteins (gp120 and gp 41) and the internal group-specific antigen (p24) B. HIV probably arose as an endogenous virus of humans since HIV proviral DNA is found in the DNA of certain normal human cells C. Transmiss ...
Vaccine Table for Board Review
Vaccine Table for Board Review

... Vaccine Types for Board Review Below are listed pathogens that have vaccines available for human use. These are often found in clinical case scenario questions. Please fill out the specific type of vaccine (e.g. live attenuated, component, etc) next to pathogen listed. Some pathogens have more than ...
1-Intro pages 3 - California Childcare Health Program
1-Intro pages 3 - California Childcare Health Program

... polio are examples of illnesses that are usually spread through exposure to germs in the stool or by what is known as fecal-oral transmission. This means that germs leave the body of the infected person in their stool (bowel movement) and enter the body of another person through their mouth. In most ...
Life course epidemiology and infectious diseases
Life course epidemiology and infectious diseases

... Figure 1 shows how influences may affect various stages of the process. This emphasises proximate biological factors. Clearly there are more distal factors that may be more easily measured. For example, exposure to the infectious agent is highly dependent on behaviour—mixing patterns with other youn ...
Full-Text PDF
Full-Text PDF

... respective host species [2,26]. The different morbilliviruses most likely evolved from a common ancestral virus that has adapted to their respective mammalian hosts, indicating that morbilliviruses have an intrinsic capacity to adapt to new host species [26]. This adaptation requires mutations in th ...
Miscellaneous proposal
Miscellaneous proposal

... This change is extremely important to OIE and National disease surveillance and control programmes. The increased cost and restrictions on shipping posed by UN 2900 and UN 2814 for tissues submitted for diagnosis will significantly curtail control programmes for animal diseases. This restriction wil ...
menstrual irregularities and abnormal uterine bleeding
menstrual irregularities and abnormal uterine bleeding

... in turn, may lead to scarring of the reproductive organs, which can result in an ectopic pregnancy (a pregnancy outside the uterus), infertility or even death for a woman. Human papillomavirus infection (HPV infection), an STD, is a known cause of cancer of the cervix. Many STDs can be passed from a ...
List the ways that diseases are transmitted from one person to
List the ways that diseases are transmitted from one person to

... An infectious disease is any disease caused by microbes that can be spread from one person to another. Microbes include bacteria viruses, and other agents such as parasites. This activity will simulate the spread of an infectious disease. A simulation is a simplified demonstration of a real biologic ...
Ear Notch
Ear Notch

... • Prevalent in 20% of US herds • 5-20% of ALL dairy cattle infected – 25-30% of all herds – increasing in both dairy and beef – sheep, goats and deer also susceptible ...
EVD - UNSSECAA
EVD - UNSSECAA

Streptococcus pneumoniae
Streptococcus pneumoniae

... day of his life until symptoms gradually subside over next two days with copious nasal drainage. ...
Persistent detection of Zika virus RNA in semen
Persistent detection of Zika virus RNA in semen

... that all travellers returning from areas with ongoing ZIKV transmission should adopt safer sex practices or consider abstinence for at least eight weeks after their return [4,19]; if men have ZIKV-related symptoms, they should adopt safer sex practices or consider abstinence for at least six months. ...
Congenital Infections
Congenital Infections

... • VZV can cross the placenta in the late stages of pregnancy • Neonatal varicella may vary from a mild disease to a fatal disseminated infection. • If rash in mother occurs more than 1 week before delivery, then sufficient immunity would have been transferred to the fetus. • Zoster immunoglobulin sh ...
Introduction to Viral Diseases of Fish 1
Introduction to Viral Diseases of Fish 1

... of the virus is confirmed using serology, in which serum (part of the blood) from animals known to be infected with the virus is tested for its ability to "recognize" the suspected virus; this confirms that the virus in the animal's body is the same as the virus that has been isolated in the laborat ...
Liver associated enzymes
Liver associated enzymes

... coagulopathy which were further evidence of liver dysfunction. There have been rare cases reported of acalculous cholecystitis and fulminant hepatic failure. ...
Bloodborne Pathogens - Texas Gas Association
Bloodborne Pathogens - Texas Gas Association

... HIV cannot be transferred by door knobs, drinking fountains, mosquitos, oral secretions, sneezes, toilets or by shaking hands. ...
MERS-CoV
MERS-CoV

... • A person with an acute respiratory infection, which may include history of fever and cough and evidence of pulmonary parenchymal disease(pneumonia, ARDS) based upon clinical or radiographic evidence of consolidation, who requires admission to hospital. ...
Information for patients with HIV, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C - ivf
Information for patients with HIV, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C - ivf

... requested to undergo an HIV-test during their diagnostic work-up. Of course, it is also possible to have this test carried out in another laboratory or to copy the results of a recent test into our files. ...
Table S1 Virulence of SE  gal and SE  waaL in BALB/c mice
Table S1 Virulence of SE gal and SE waaL in BALB/c mice

... Mammary microbiota of dairy ruminants: fact or fiction? ...
Chapter 6: Infection Control
Chapter 6: Infection Control

... For example, eye infections could be red, swollen, painful, and warm to the touch. • S/Sx include redness, swelling, pain, heat, drainage (fluid from a wound or cavity). ...
Avian influenza Fact sheet Updated April 2011 Key facts
Avian influenza Fact sheet Updated April 2011 Key facts

... In many patients, the disease caused by the H5N1 virus follows an unusually aggressive clinical course, with rapid deterioration and high fatality. Like most emerging disease, H5N1 influenza in humans is poorly understood. The incubation period for H5N1 avian influenza may be longer than that for no ...
Malaria Sickle alleles
Malaria Sickle alleles

... Malaria is a febrile, mosquito-borne infection, classically characterized by periodic chills, rigors, and high fevers followed by profuse sweating, which occur at regular intervals of 48 to 72 hours. Infection in humans begins when the infected female anopheline mosquito injects the sporozoite paras ...
African swine fever
African swine fever

... Immunity after recovery from natural infection is life- ...
viral arthritis
viral arthritis

... diseased avian species: chickens, turkeys, pigeons, ducks, geese, and psittacines. However, a firm etiological relationship was not always established. ...
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West Nile fever

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