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Enteroviruses
Enteroviruses

Endemic Diseases Involving Nervous System OBJECTIVES
Endemic Diseases Involving Nervous System OBJECTIVES

... (d) PERIOD OF INFECTIVITY: 14 – 28 days from the onset of the disease, but carriers may remain infective for much longer period. ...
Bovine Herpes Virus - Veterinary Extension
Bovine Herpes Virus - Veterinary Extension

Diapositiva 1
Diapositiva 1

... endemic as there is a continuous presence of infectious and susceptible pigs. Most of these endemic infections spread within the pig herd without signs of disease. As a result, the number of infections in commercial swine herds continuously increases, as there is no efficient strategy to control inf ...
The Primate Enteric Virome in Health and Disease
The Primate Enteric Virome in Health and Disease

... The microbiome is increasingly accepted as a key determinant of health and disease, but the concepts that the virome may play a role in normal physiology or in disease via non-standard pathogenetic mechanisms are newer (1). These concepts are biologically important and may link metagenomics to class ...
Brucella Species
Brucella Species

Pig Health - Colitis Pig Health - Colitis
Pig Health - Colitis Pig Health - Colitis

... level of faecal recycling in the group and between groups. The consistent sign is one of diarrhoea (scour) in a proportion of the animals which can contain blood and mucous, particularly seen with Swine Dysentery, Whipworm infection and occasionally with Spirochaetal colitis.  Often the scour is jus ...
Campylobacter
Campylobacter

... the intestines where they divide and grow. Illness can develop any time during an incubation period of between 1 to 10 days, but usually manifests itself 2 to 5 days following ingestion. Initial symptoms are nausea, headache and fever (feeling hot and cold), followed by acute abdominal pains and pro ...
Respiratory diseases - Academic Resources at Missouri Western
Respiratory diseases - Academic Resources at Missouri Western

B. anthracis
B. anthracis

Where are we today
Where are we today

... – schistosomiasis will extend northward – 20 million MORE people at risk by 2050 ...
Introduction to Environmentally Transmitted Pathogens
Introduction to Environmentally Transmitted Pathogens

Hog Hunting 101 - Gilmer Acoustics
Hog Hunting 101 - Gilmer Acoustics

... or cubed and fried with gravy and potatoes will convince many an outdoorsman to do his best to put a couple in the freezer every year. However there are a few things you should know before you rush out to your favorite hunting grounds in search of feral pork. Feral hogs like all wild animals are sus ...
infection control and tb
infection control and tb

... stay home from work or school. Notify supervisor for medical help, report infection exposure. • When you are well stay a safe distance (2-3 feet) from those who are sick. • If you are given medication to treat an infection, be sure to finish your prescription. Stopping too soon may lead to resistanc ...
Injury Epidemiology, Prevention and Control
Injury Epidemiology, Prevention and Control

Clinical finding: Infection with HIV-1 is associated with a progressive
Clinical finding: Infection with HIV-1 is associated with a progressive

... mononucleosis-like illness called acute HIV infection, the most common symptoms of which may include fever, lymphadenopathy, pharyngitis, rash, myalgia, malaise, mouth and esophageal sores, and may also include, but less commonly, headache, nausea and vomiting, enlarged liver/spleen, weight loss, th ...
Marburg hemorrhagic fever
Marburg hemorrhagic fever

... reported in Angola, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, South Africa (in a person with a recent travel history to Zimbabwe) and Uganda. Transmission. Transmission of the virus from person to person requires close contact with a patient. Transmission does not occur during the incubation period.I ...
Urogenital and Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Urogenital and Sexually Transmitted Diseases

... Vesicles (fluid-filled blisters) at site of entry ~1 week after exposure Vesicles are infectious & painful Virus is latent in sacral ganglia reactivates  new vesicles ...
Bluetongue virus serotype 8 in Northern Europe
Bluetongue virus serotype 8 in Northern Europe

...  She lives for several weeks and takes several more blood meals injecting virus with her saliva  She dies  Her eggs become larvae then nuliparous females (or males) but are not infected (no vertical infection). ...
BOVINE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM -- Lectures 1-2
BOVINE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM -- Lectures 1-2

Self-Stopping Worms
Self-Stopping Worms

7-17_MICROBES_AND_DISEASE
7-17_MICROBES_AND_DISEASE

... Dengue Fever –infection from bite of an infected mosquito – usually in the tropics Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever –illness from Ebolavirus with severe bleeding Hepatitis – infectious liver disease – three viruses most common - hepatitis a, b, and c Influenza – commonly called the flu, highly infectious res ...
2017 MICROBES AND DISEASE Normal flora – Many microbes
2017 MICROBES AND DISEASE Normal flora – Many microbes

Common Sexually Transmitted Infections
Common Sexually Transmitted Infections

... (sexual intercourse), sharing needles, razors, toothbrushes, etc. of infected person. A pregnant woman can pass the virus to her child. ...
HEMOBARTONELLOSIS (FELINE INFECTIOUS ANEMIA)
HEMOBARTONELLOSIS (FELINE INFECTIOUS ANEMIA)

... itself to the surface of the cat's red blood. The parasite is called Hemobartonella felis and is a member of the Protozoa. The infected blood cells may die directly or be treated as “foreign” by the cat’s immune system and destroyed. If enough cells are infected and destroyed the result is anemia. W ...
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Trichinosis



Trichinosis, trichinellosis or trichiniasis is a parasitic disease caused by roundworms of the genus Trichinella. Several subspecies cause human disease, but T. spiralis is the most known. Infection may occur without symptoms, while intestinal invasion can cause diarrhea, abdominal pain or vomiting. Larval migration into muscle tissue (one week after being infected) can cause edema of the face or around the eyes, conjunctivitis, fever, muscle pains, splinter hemorrhages, rashes, and peripheral eosinophilia. Life-threatening cases can result in myocarditis, central nervous system involvement, and pneumonitis. Larval encystment in the muscles causes pain and weakness, followed by slow progression of symptoms.Trichinosis is mainly caused by eating undercooked meat containing encysted larval Trichinella. In the stomach the larvae are exposed to stomach acid and pepsin which releases them from their cysts. They then start invading wall of the small intestine, where they develop into adult worms. Females are 2.2 mm in length; males 1.2 mm. The life span in the small intestine is about four weeks. After 1 week, the females release more larvae that migrate to voluntarily controlled muscles where they encyst. Diagnosis is usually made based on symptoms, and is confirmed by serology or by finding encysted or non-encysted larvae in biopsy or autopsy samples.The best way to prevent trichinellosis is to cook meat to safe temperatures. Using food thermometers can make sure the temperature inside the meat is high enough to kill the parasites. The meat should not be tasted until it is completely cooked. Once infection has been verified treatment with antiparasitic drugs such as albendazole or mebendazole should be started at once. A fast response may help kill adult worms and thereby stop further release of larvae. Once the larvae have established in muscle cells, usually by 3 to 4 weeks after infection, treatment may not completely get rid of the infection or symptoms. Both drugs are considered safe but have been associated with side effects such as bone marrow suppression. Patients on longer courses should be monitored though regular blood counts to detect adverse effects quickly and then discontinue treatment. Both medicines should be treated with caution during pregnancy or children under the age of 2 years, but the WHO weighs the benefits of treatment higher than the risks. In addition to antiparasitic medication, treatment with steroids is sometimes required in severe cases.Trichinosis can be acquired by eating both domestic and wild animals, but is not soil-transmitted.
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