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Chapter 21 - Georgia Highlands College
Chapter 21 - Georgia Highlands College

... 1) May also result in pus-filled nodules on the tonsils C) If untreated, may lead to scarlet fever or rheumatic fever ...
Crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever - Caspian Journal of Internal
Crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever - Caspian Journal of Internal

... vitro (7). The World Health Organization (WHO) currently recommends the administration of ribavirin, oral or intravenous as a potential therapeutic drug for CCHF, but its efficacy in the treatment is controversial and some studies have shown that oral ribavirin treatment in CCHF patients do not affe ...
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis

... Ciguatera fish poisoning; consumption of fish which consume dinoflagellates with ciguatera toxin ...
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Climate change may boost spread of Zika, other viruses

... for a mosquito egg to mature into a blood-sucking female. ...
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 ...
YELLOW FEVER SURVEILLANCE KLIA EXPERIENCE
YELLOW FEVER SURVEILLANCE KLIA EXPERIENCE

... and complains of abdominal pain with vomiting. Bleeding can occur from the mouth, nose, eyes or stomach. Once this happens, blood appears in the vomit and faeces. Kidney function deteriorates. Half of the patients who enter the toxic phase die within 10 to 14 days, the rest recover without significa ...
Diseases - WordPress.com
Diseases - WordPress.com

... • These are conditions passed on through families by defective genes. • They cannot be cured. • Sickle cell anaemia is an inherited disorder which results in the red blood cells having a sickle shape instead of the normal biconcave shape. • The sickle shaped cells carry little oxygen. • Symptoms inc ...
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... As in any hospital, there were a variety of diseases encountered by the doctors. Many of them, such as rheumatism, bronchitis, diarrhea or gonorrhea are well enough known to be self-explanatory. A brief description of most of the diseases listed is included. The most prevalent disease was fever, eit ...
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... Students with a communicable disease will be allowed to attend school provided their presence does not create a substantial risk of illness or transmission to other students or employees. The term "communicable disease" will mean an infectious or contagious disease spread from person to person, or a ...
No 11 - 2010 - EPI-NEWS - Statens Serum Institut
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... Clarification of need for HIV testing after ris situation EPI­NEWS 46/09 comments on the National Board of Health's new strategy on health staff's duty to actively offer HIV testing to anyone at special risk of infection. For persons actively requesting an HIV test, it was stated that testing should ...
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... Texas Animal Health Commission “Because Livestock and Poultry Health Matters” ...
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... Symptoms of the generalised inflammatory response are therefore part of a sophisticated and coordinated whole body response that results in symptoms of fever, malaise, tiredness and generalised raised white blood cell count. There is therefore no mal-function and once again the symptoms themselves a ...
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Smallpox (Variola)

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Chapter 21, Lesson 3 – Common Infectious Diseases
Chapter 21, Lesson 3 – Common Infectious Diseases

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Information Sheet Yellow Fever Vaccination

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Fever in the returning traveler - Canadian Association of Emergency

... seeking medical help; most common vaccine preventable  • 1000 times more common than Yellow Fever Fatality rate of 0 5‐1 Fatality rate of 0.5 1.3%; tends to be milder in children (70%  3%; tends to be milder in children (70% asymptomatic) • Cases of acute liver failure with Hepatitis A and (therapeu ...
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BACTERIAL AGENTS Bacterial Infectious DiseasesAnthrax

... Melioidosis : caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, which is found in soil and water. MRSA infection : characterized by quick weight loss and muscle depletion. Nocardiosis : Nocardia asteroides or Nocardia brasiliensis affects either the lungs or the entire body. Pertussis (Whooping cough) : severe h ...
Civil War Diseases - Twyman
Civil War Diseases - Twyman

... These fallen men were cared for by a woefully underqualifled, understaffed, and undersupplied medical corps. Working against incredible odds, however, the medical corps increased in size, improved its techniques, and gained a greater understanding of medicine and disease every year the war was fough ...
A Cutaneous Look at Cur... 3720KB Feb 13 2017 06:30:26 PM
A Cutaneous Look at Cur... 3720KB Feb 13 2017 06:30:26 PM

...  Estimated: 40% of world’s population at risk  Mosquitos with virus are currently found in  Florida  Louisiana  New Mexico  Arizona  Texas  California  Utah  And…as far north as Illinois and New York ...
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chapter01

... Noninfectious viruses are said to be inactivated; you cannot “kill” a virus (since they are not considered living organisms) Obligate intracellular parasites ...
Case 1: A four-month-old boy with bilateral arm swelling
Case 1: A four-month-old boy with bilateral arm swelling

... Clinician’s Corner ...
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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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