Results 341 to 350 of about 1,544,983 (360)
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Fever

Pediatrics In Review, 1998
Fever is caused by a resetting of the thermoregulatory center in the hypothalamus, most often by viral or bacterial infections. The specific etiologic diagnoses vary, depending on the child's age and height and duration of fever. Fever lasting 7 days or more is termed an FUO.
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Fever

AACN Clinical Issues: Advanced Practice in Acute and Critical Care, 1997
Fever is a host defense response that provides a sign of an ongoing process related to infection, inflammation, drug reactions, neoplasms, autoimmune diseases, and vascular disorders. The most frequent causes of fever in acutely ill patients are infection and inflammation, but fever may be caused by one or more of a long list of pathophysiologic ...
R, Henker, D, Kramer, S, Rogers
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Fever

Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 2009
A comprehensive review of the current advances in the field of fever in children is presented.Clinical and diagnostic predictors of serious disease in a child with fever are still being explored for early diagnosis so that therapy could be appropriately targeted. Host susceptibility and immune response are making strides in the understanding of disease
Avind, Rampersad, Deepa, Mukundan
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Fever

Pediatrics, 1980
Fever, the regulation of body temperature at an elevated level, is a common response to infection throughout the vertebrates. Mammals and birds rely on both physiologic and behavioral mechanisms to raise their body temperatures to this elevated thermoregulatory "set-point" during infection.
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Fever

Hastings Center Report, 2015
AbstractAn earthy smell seeps from the cinderblock room, and a fan in the corner rattles as it circulates the heat. My eyes cross trying to read the square black numbers on the thermometer. I feel achy and tired. I would not be so nervous about the result except that I have been caring for Ebola patients in West Africa.
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Yellow Fever

Medicine, 1998
Abstract Yellow fever is an acute mosquito-bome flavivirus infection characterized in its full-blown form by fever, jaundice, albuminuria, and haemorrhage. Two forms are distinguished: urban yellow fever in which the virus is spread from person to person by peridomestic Aedes aegypti mosquitos and jungle (sylvan) yellow fever transmitted
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Swine fever: classical swine fever and African swine fever

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 2002
Because of the clinical and pathologic similarity to common endemic diseases, introduction of CSFV or ASFV strains of moderate to low virulence represents the greatest risk to North American swine herds. Producers, veterinarians, and diagnosticians should increase their awareness of these devastating diseases and request specific diagnostic testing ...
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Fever

The Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2004
Jason, Imperato, Leon D, Sanchez
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Fever

New England Journal of Medicine, 1972
E, Atkins, P, Bodel
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