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Aetiologies of Acute Undifferentiated Febrile illness in Adult
Aetiologies of Acute Undifferentiated Febrile illness in Adult

... bacterial infections (38%) and TB (19%) were the most common aetiological agents of fever. Another study from east India [15] reported that TB (53%), neoplasms (17%) and collagen vascular disorders (11%) were the dominant causes. Mixed infection with more than one aetiological agent can result in an ...
Volume 26 - No 15: Salmonella typhi
Volume 26 - No 15: Salmonella typhi

... same organism was isolated from a subsequent blood culture. The isolates were susceptible to multiple antibiotics, including ciprofloxacin, chloramphenicol, ceftriaxone and cefepime. The patient was admitted to the outside hospital for intravenous antibiotic therapy and management of dehydration. Ep ...
Interventions for Clients with Infectious Problems of the Respiratory
Interventions for Clients with Infectious Problems of the Respiratory

... A virus from a family of virus types known as “coronaviruses”  Virus infection of cells of the respiratory tract, triggering inflammatory response  No known effective treatment for this infection  Prevention of spread of infection ...
Classical Swine Fever
Classical Swine Fever

... The most commonly used tests are virus neutralization tests, which include the fluorescent antibody virus neutralization (FAVN) test and the neutralizing peroxidase– linked assay (NPLA), and various ELISAs. Antibodies against ruminant pestiviruses may be found in breeding animals; only tests that us ...
Typhoid fever: yesterday, today and unfortunately still tomorrow
Typhoid fever: yesterday, today and unfortunately still tomorrow

... form spores. S. typhi can survive for several weeks in food, water and dried sewage. Typhoid fever occurs throughout the world. It is estimated that there are at least 12.5 million cases per annum, of which around 500 000 will prove fatal. This is almost certainly an underestimate, as many cases in ...
Nervous System Infections - Biology Online Learning
Nervous System Infections - Biology Online Learning

... Cryptococcal Meningioencephalitis • Prevention and Treatment • No vaccine or other preventative measures • Treatment with amphotericin B is effective • Often given concurrently with flucytosine or itraconazole • Amphotericin B does not reliably cross blood-brain barrier • Drug administered through ...
Viral hemorrhagic fevers in India - The Association of Physicians of
Viral hemorrhagic fevers in India - The Association of Physicians of

... of the cytokine response may be related to the cross-recognition of dengue specific T cells. TNF-alpha has been found to be high in animal models of DHF. The main features of DHF are increased vascular permeability without morphological damage to the capillary endothelium, thrombocytopenia, altered ...
Dengue Virus
Dengue Virus

... Simasathien, S, and V Watanaveeradej. "Dengue Vaccine." Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand. Nov. 2005. Pub Med. 11 Dec. 2006 . Schnittler, H J., and H Feldmann. "Viral Hemorrhagic Fever--a Vascular Disease?" Thrombosis and Haemostasis. June 2003. Pub Med. 11 ...
Vectorborne diseases in West Africa: geographic
Vectorborne diseases in West Africa: geographic

... limited resources are invested in its diagnosis, treatment and control, and it is strongly associated with poverty.17 Humans are infected via the bite of phlebotomine sandflies (Phlebotomus spp.). The leishmaniases can be classified into two epidemiological entities according to the type of transmis ...
african_swine_fever_8_important_outbreaks
african_swine_fever_8_important_outbreaks

... occurred in Mozambique south of the Save river for the first time and in Kenya for the first time in 30 years. In 1997/8 ASF was introduced into Madagascar for the first time, where it has become endemic, and from which it spread to Mauritius in 2007, requiring considerable efforts to eradicate it. ...
Facts on Zika Virus • Mosquito Species Involved
Facts on Zika Virus • Mosquito Species Involved

... Protect yourself against Mosquito Bites & Disease Eliminating mosquito breeding areas • Once a week, empty, turn over containers. ...
the prolonged fever
the prolonged fever

... 3.Convection : the absorption of the body heat by the fluid environmental matter (air, water when swimming ). The heating may determine air circulation that promotes the contact of the body surface with layers of cold air. 4.Evaporation of the insensible perspiration = water evaporation from the moi ...
Problem 06- Fever
Problem 06- Fever

...  Secondary bacterial infection (staph/ strep), may lead to necrotising fasciitis, toxic shock. Consider if new onset fever or persistent after the first few days.  Encephalitis- occurs early (within 1 week of rash), generalised, good prognosis, Cerebellitis characteristic- ataxic with cerebellar s ...
It`s Thursday…get excited!!
It`s Thursday…get excited!!

... then spreads toward the center Becomes petechial within 1-3 days, then confluent and hemorrhagic with areas of necrosis ...
Mediterranean spotted fever with encephalitis
Mediterranean spotted fever with encephalitis

... doxycycline in adults. However, in adults with a more severe form of the disease, treatment should be prescribed until the patient is afebrile for 24 h. Doxycycline is recommended for treatment of encephalitis caused by R. rickettsii (Tunkel et al., 2008). However, adequate CSF and/or central nervou ...
View Full Text-PDF
View Full Text-PDF

... Typhi infections in a tertiary care facility in North India over a period of 3 years. A retrospective study was carried out in the Serology Laboratory, Department of Microbiology, Pt B D Sharma, Rohtak over a period of 3 years, from Jan 2012 to December 2014. Serum samples of patients suspected of h ...
Abasia - Inability to walk or stand, caused by hysteria Ablepsy
Abasia - Inability to walk or stand, caused by hysteria Ablepsy

... Diary fever - A fever that lasts one day, see day fever Diphtheria - Diphtheria is a potentially fatal, contagious disease that usually involves the nose, throat, and air passages, but may also infect the skin. Its most striking feature is the formation of a grayish membrane covering the tonsils and ...
Bio-Terrorism and the Respiratory Therapist
Bio-Terrorism and the Respiratory Therapist

... Clinical Case III • A TV station reports that a terrorist group claims to have attacked Coney Island with a bioagent. Witnesses reported a cloud of white dust. As a therapist at a Brooklyn hospital you have seen numerous patients from that area with fever, headache, malaise, chest discomfort, non-p ...
Bio-Terrorism and the Respiratory Therapist
Bio-Terrorism and the Respiratory Therapist

... Clinical Case III • A TV station reports that a terrorist group claims to have attacked Coney Island with a bioagent. Witnesses reported a cloud of white dust. As a therapist at a Brooklyn hospital you have seen numerous patients from that area with fever, headache, malaise, chest discomfort, non-p ...
Fever in ICU
Fever in ICU

...  Candida species are constituents of the normal flora in about 30% of all healthy people. ...
Roseola
Roseola

... from the nose or mouth travelling through the air or by direct contact. The tiny droplets of fluid are expelled when an infected person talks, coughs, sneezes or laughs. If people touch these droplets and then touch their own noses or mouths they can become infected. The incubation period (time from ...
ID cases - Pediatrics House Staff
ID cases - Pediatrics House Staff

... meningitis after S. pneumoniae, N. meningitidis and Group B streptococcus. It is one of the 3 major causes of neonatal meningitis and is the most common cause of bacterial meningitis in patients with lymphoma, patients with organ transplants, or those receiving corticosteroid immunosuppressive thera ...
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
GENERAL PRINCIPLES

... Pathogens within the host can induce pathologic changes if host immunity is suppressed by some factors. ...
General Microbiology Fact Sheet(PDF 3.5MB)
General Microbiology Fact Sheet(PDF 3.5MB)

... symptoms. Perinatal infections can result period is 3 weeks. agent for 7-10 days after delivery; infected patients can in abortion or stillbirth in utero; In adults shed organism in the stool for months. infection can cause meningitis, endocarditis, septicemia, and disseminated ...
The infectivity
The infectivity

... and limbs, and reaching the palms and soles.The rash last 5-6 days, then fades over about 7 days in the same manner as it evolved, often leaving a fine desquamation of skin. Of the major symptoms of measles, the cough lasts the longest, often up to 10 days. generalized lymphadenopathy may be present ...
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Yellow fever



Yellow fever, known historically as yellow jack, yellow plague, or bronze john, is an acute viral disease. In most cases, symptoms include fever, chills, loss of appetite, nausea, muscle pains particularly in the back, and headaches. Symptoms typically improve within five days. In some people within a day of improving, the fever comes back, abdominal pain occurs, and liver damage begins causing yellow skin. If this occurs, the risk of bleeding and kidney problems is also increased.The disease is caused by the yellow fever virus and is spread by the bite of the female mosquito. It infects only humans, other primates, and several species of mosquitoes. In cities, it is spread primarily by mosquitoes of the Aedes aegypti species. The virus is an RNA virus of the genus Flavivirus. The disease may be difficult to tell apart from other illnesses, especially in the early stages. To confirm a suspected case, blood sample testing with polymerase chain reaction is required.A safe and effective vaccine against yellow fever exists and some countries require vaccinations for travelers. Other efforts to prevent infection include reducing the population of the transmitting mosquito. In areas where yellow fever is common and vaccination is uncommon, early diagnosis of cases and immunization of large parts of the population is important to prevent outbreaks. Once infected, management is symptomatic with no specific measures effective against the virus. In those with severe disease, death occurs in about half of people without treatment.Yellow fever causes 200,000 infections and 30,000 deaths every year, with nearly 90% of these occurring in Africa. Nearly a billion people live in an area of the world where the disease is common. It is common in tropical areas of South America and Africa, but not in Asia. Since the 1980s, the number of cases of yellow fever has been increasing. This is believed to be due to fewer people being immune, more people living in cities, people moving frequently, and changing climate. The disease originated in Africa, where it spread to South America through the slave trade in the 17th century. Since the 17th century, several major outbreaks of the disease have occurred in the Americas, Africa, and Europe. In the 18th and 19th centuries, yellow fever was seen as one of the most dangerous infectious diseases. In 1927 yellow fever virus became the first human virus to be isolated.
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