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SCIENTIFIC DEVELOPMENT OF A PUBLIC
SCIENTIFIC DEVELOPMENT OF A PUBLIC

... Uruguay and Turkey are closest to initiating the approval process and roll out.  It is the greatest scientific breakthrough for this type of cancer treatment in the last 10 years to become a drug readily available to patients. BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA. Scientists and clinical researchers introduced ...
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... • It depends on the antigen • Some disease-causing bacteria multiply into new forms that our body doesn’t recognize, requiring annual vaccinations, like the flu shot • Booster shot - reminds the immune system of the antigen • Others last for a lifetime, such as chicken pox ...
The Human Immune System - De Soto Area School District
The Human Immune System - De Soto Area School District

... • It depends on the antigen • Some disease-causing bacteria multiply into new forms that our body doesn’t recognize, requiring annual vaccinations, like the flu shot • Booster shot - reminds the immune system of the antigen • Others last for a lifetime, such as chicken pox ...
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... – HBs-Ag, (HBc-Ab), HCV-Ab, HIV-Ab – immediately, follow-up at 1, 3, and 6 months – HBs-Ab from the exposed, if given hepatitis B vaccine  HBsAb ...
an abstract example in the correct form
an abstract example in the correct form

... Meningitis due to Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A represents an important public health problem in Africa. Since 2000, outbreaks of serogroup W135 have also occurred. Currently, there is a shortage of meningococcal vaccines to cope with an eventual crisis of multiple large-scale meningococcal epi ...
Immune Disorders and Imbalances
Immune Disorders and Imbalances

... • Intervention to correct this condition must be taken in the first few months of life. • Bone marrow transplants or Stem Cell replacement therapy can help to replenish immune cells. ...
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... Now, in a study funded by the PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative and the Medical Research Council, published in the journal PLOS Pathogens, For the first time, researchers have shown that the researchers have determined that the number of number of parasites each mosquito carries parasites each individ ...
The Human Immune System
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... • It depends on the antigen • Some disease-causing bacteria multiply into new forms that our body doesn’t recognize, requiring annual vaccinations, like the flu shot • Booster shot - reminds the immune system of the antigen • Others last for a lifetime, such as chicken pox ...
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Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) disease

... Zealand Immunisation Schedule at 6 weeks, 3 months, 5 months and 15 months of age. It is important to start the doses on time because infants are particularly vulnerable to this infection. Children aged 15 months to 5 years of age who have not received one dose of Hib vaccine after 12 months of age ...
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... Microarray-based analysis of mRNA transcripts from peripheral blood leukocytes of vaccinated cattle (n=21), drawn on 0, 1, 14 and 15 days post-vaccination, revealed that in response to Ad-5 FMDV, protected cattle (n=5) demonstrated a rapid but short-lived induction of stress-related genes. Vaccinat ...
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... CASES OF IPD HAVE BEEN REDUCED BY ...
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... I have too many stories and too many memories - a nurse who came to us at 60 with advanced stage disease – we cured her cancer, but she urine and feces streaming out of her vagina from the radiation damage – she would not leave her home and died a terrible death from failure to thrive – she had a lo ...
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... Science alone cannot win the battle against infectious diseases ...
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Outer Membrane Vesicle of Bacteria: Friend or Foe?

... has been documented that polysaccharide(PS) (from bacterial capsule or LPS)-protein conjugates are usually immunogens in mice and rabbits as well as in humans. Many studies have shown that these conjugated vaccines elicit humoral and cellular to many pathogens in humans including N. meningitidis, V. ...
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Mycoplasmosis

... • Generalized (systemic) infection associated with an inability to develop a normal immune response (known as “immunodeficiency”); suppression of immune response, as by drugs (known as “immunosuppression”); or cancer • Impaired resistance of the host—may allow the organism to cross the protective, m ...
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Vaccination



Vaccination is the administration of antigenic material (a vaccine) to stimulate an individual's immune system to develop adaptive immunity to a pathogen. Vaccines can prevent or ameliorate morbidity from infection. When a sufficiently large percentage of a population has been vaccinated, this results in herd immunity. The effectiveness of vaccination has been widely studied and verified; for example, the influenza vaccine, the HPV vaccine, and the chicken pox vaccine. Vaccination is the most effective method of preventing infectious diseases; widespread immunity due to vaccination is largely responsible for the worldwide eradication of smallpox and the restriction of diseases such as polio, measles, and tetanus from much of the world. The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that licensed vaccines are currently available to prevent or contribute to the prevention and control of twenty-five infections.The active agent of a vaccine may be intact but inactivated (non-infective) or attenuated (with reduced infectivity) forms of the causative pathogens, or purified components of the pathogen that have been found to be highly immunogenic (e.g., outer coat proteins of a virus). Toxoids are produced for immunization against toxin-based diseases, such as the modification of tetanospasmin toxin of tetanus to remove its toxic effect but retain its immunogenic effect.Smallpox was most likely the first disease people tried to prevent by inoculating themselves and was the first disease for which a vaccine was produced. The smallpox vaccine was discovered in 1796 by the British physician Edward Jenner, although at least six people had used the same principles years earlier. Louis Pasteur furthered the concept through his work in microbiology. The immunization was called vaccination because it was derived from a virus affecting cows (Latin: vacca—cow). Smallpox was a contagious and deadly disease, causing the deaths of 20–60% of infected adults and over 80% of infected children. When smallpox was finally eradicated in 1979, it had already killed an estimated 300–500 million people in the 20th century.In common speech, 'vaccination' and 'immunization' have a similar meaning. This distinguishes it from inoculation, which uses unweakened live pathogens, although in common usage either can refer to an immunization. Vaccination efforts have been met with some controversy on scientific, ethical, political, medical safety, and religious grounds. In rare cases, vaccinations can injure people and, in the United States, they may receive compensation for those injuries under the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. Early success and compulsion brought widespread acceptance, and mass vaccination campaigns have greatly reduced the incidence of many diseases in numerous geographic regions.
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