Results 261 to 270 of about 569,649 (309)
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Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1983
Dengue viruses are mosquito-borne viruses which exist in nature as four separate types. These are enveloped ribonucleic acid viruses belonging to the family Flaviviradae, of which yellow fever virus is the type species. There is a continuum of response in dengue-infected human beings from a mild, undifferentiated fever to fatal shock syndrome.
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Dengue viruses are mosquito-borne viruses which exist in nature as four separate types. These are enveloped ribonucleic acid viruses belonging to the family Flaviviradae, of which yellow fever virus is the type species. There is a continuum of response in dengue-infected human beings from a mild, undifferentiated fever to fatal shock syndrome.
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Dengue fever and dengue virus in the People's Republic of China
Reviews in Medical Virology, 2021Infection with dengue virus (DENV) leads to symptoms variable from dengue fever to severe dengue, which has posed a huge socioeconomic and disease burden to the world population, particularly in tropical and subtropical regions.
Tiantian Wu, Zhongdao Wu, Yi-Ping Li
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Dengue Fever and Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever [PDF]
Dengue is an acute influenza-like disease caused by any of 4 genetically similar mosquito-borne arboviruses of the Flavivirus family. Dengue viruses are thus related to yellow fever virus, West Nile virus, Japanese encephalitis virus, and several other human pathogens.
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Seminars in diagnostic pathology, 2019
In this review we will discuss the epidemiology, clinical characteristics, diagnostic tests, pathologic features, treatment and disease prevention strategies for four mosquito-borne flaviviruses.
J. Guarner, G. Hale
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In this review we will discuss the epidemiology, clinical characteristics, diagnostic tests, pathologic features, treatment and disease prevention strategies for four mosquito-borne flaviviruses.
J. Guarner, G. Hale
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Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 2009
Dialogues in Dermatology, a monthly audio program from the American Academy of Dermatology contains discussions between dermatologists on timely topics. Commentaries from Dialogues Editor-in-Chief Warren R. Heymann, MD, are provided after each discussion as a topic summary and are provided here as a special service to readers of the Journal of the ...
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Dialogues in Dermatology, a monthly audio program from the American Academy of Dermatology contains discussions between dermatologists on timely topics. Commentaries from Dialogues Editor-in-Chief Warren R. Heymann, MD, are provided after each discussion as a topic summary and are provided here as a special service to readers of the Journal of the ...
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Arkhiv patologii, 2020
Dengue fever is acute zooanthroponic infection from a group of vector-borne viral hemorrhagic fevers. Since 2013, Russia has introduced the mandatory registration of dengue fever cases. The paper presents data on the epidemiology, etiology, and pathogenesis of Dengue fever and describes a case of a fatal outcome in severe dengue fever and morphological
E. V. Porotnikova+4 more
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Dengue fever is acute zooanthroponic infection from a group of vector-borne viral hemorrhagic fevers. Since 2013, Russia has introduced the mandatory registration of dengue fever cases. The paper presents data on the epidemiology, etiology, and pathogenesis of Dengue fever and describes a case of a fatal outcome in severe dengue fever and morphological
E. V. Porotnikova+4 more
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Science, 1996
New results in this issue of Science by Olson et al. ( p. 884 ) report a way to genetically engineer mosquitoes so they cannot transmit dengue fever to humans. This first successful effort to express an exogenous gene that confers resistance to an important human ...
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New results in this issue of Science by Olson et al. ( p. 884 ) report a way to genetically engineer mosquitoes so they cannot transmit dengue fever to humans. This first successful effort to express an exogenous gene that confers resistance to an important human ...
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Scientific American, 2011
The article discusses research by scientists of the University of Queensland, Australia, who are testing a method for reducing the spread of dengue that involves vaccinating Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, which are carriers of the dengue microbe, instead of humans.
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The article discusses research by scientists of the University of Queensland, Australia, who are testing a method for reducing the spread of dengue that involves vaccinating Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, which are carriers of the dengue microbe, instead of humans.
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The Ethnoecology of Dengue Fever
Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 1997This article employs an ethnoecological analysis to link indigenous, ethnomedical, and Western biomedical ideas of infectious disease causation/ prevention. The ethnoecological analysis is expanded to include the cultural and historical context of political will and community participation in dengue fever control activities in an urban neighborhood in ...
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