Results 271 to 280 of about 26,279 (296)
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Chickenpox With Retinopathy

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1966
Encephalitis accompanying chickenpox is extremely uncommon and usually has a more benign course than the encephalitis which occurs with other diseases such as measles, German measles, smallpox, mumps, influenza, and other obscure febrile viral illnesses.1The incidence of encephalitis has been reported as 0.26% in 6,774 cases of chickenpox.2However, the
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Chickenpox and leukemia

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1961
Summary This report concerns chickenpox occurringin the course of acute leukemia. Four children are described, including 2 who died with chickenpox and one who survived a prolonged course of the disease. Histologic study in the fatal cases revealed focal hepatic necrosis and pulmonary hemorrhage and edema.
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Chickenpox: An update

Journal of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, 2015
Chickenpox, caused by the varicella-zoster virus, is mostly a mild disease in healthy children, but can be debilitating in immunocompromised individuals or susceptible adults. The disease is highly contagious. The lesions start as rose-colored macules, and progress rapidly to become papules, vesicles with the classic “dew drop on a rose petal ...
Alexander K. C. Leung   +2 more
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Managing chickenpox

Early Years Educator, 2010
Most practitioners will encounter an outbreak of chickenpox during their career, possibly many, which makes it worth knowing some simple facts about the disease, how it spreads and how to contain it.
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Chickenpox in pregnancy: Revisited

Reproductive Toxicology, 2006
Varicella infection during the first and second trimester of pregnancy may increase the risk for congenital varicella syndrome 0.5-1.5% above the baseline risk for major malformation. Third trimester infection may lead to maternal pneumonia which can be life threatening if not treated appropriately.
Michael Paul Tan, Gideon Koren
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Chickenpox with Pneumonia and Pericarditis

JAMA, 1963
PERICARDITIS is a rare complication of chickenpox and has been reported only once previously. The following is an additional report. Report of a Case A 25-year-old white male experienced headache, malaise, and backache on April 23, 1961. The following day he noted sore throat, marked anorexia, a vesicular rash on the face and trunk, and a temperature
John O. Smith   +2 more
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Necrotizing fasciitis with chickenpox

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 2003
Necrotizing fasciitis can be observed in a wide variety of clinical settings in the pediatric age group. But necrotizing fasciitis as a complication of chickenpox is rare. Five cases of necrotizing fasciitis following chickenpox were treated in the authors' institutions.
Anindya Chattopadhyay   +4 more
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The chickenpox virus

Practical Pre-School, 2010
Chickenpox affects most young children, particularly those under four-years-old. Jane Stevenson explains what it is and how nurseries can cope with an outbreak
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Pulmonary Infarction With Chickenpox

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1972
To the Editor. — Glick et al (222:173, 1972) described pulmonary infarction in a patient with varicella pneumonia. Embolic lesions no doubt occur in patients with varicella infections, and the authors cite evidence that suggests that intravascular coagulation is common. It should be emphasized that infarction is one of the primary morphologic lesions
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Chickenpox with visceral involvement

The American Journal of Medicine, 1952
Abstract A fatal case of chickenpox in a seventy-one year old woman is reported. At necropsy, in addition to the typical pathologic changes in the skin, lesions were found in the lungs, liver, spleen, lymph nodes and adrenals. Characteristic intranuclear inclusion bodies were demonstrated in all these sites as well as in the granulation tissue of a ...
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