Results 171 to 180 of about 21,995 (216)
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Alpha-Herpesviridae in der Dermatologie

Der Hautarzt, 2017
The second part of this publication deals with varicella zoster virus (VZV) and presents an overview of new, rare, and atypical clinical manifestations, including photolocalized varicella, hemorrhagic bullae during varicella, the implication of VZV in immunoglobulin A vasculitis, VZV-related alopecia, ulcerative varicella skin lesions, childhood herpes
EL HAYDERI, Lara   +2 more
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Herpesviridae: Classification et structure en 1991

Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, 1992
In 1981, herpesviruses were classified by the International Committee of Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV, 1) inside the herpesviridae family. Progress in biotechnology and molecular biology during the last 10 yr, has permitted the characterization of new viruses and genomic structures.
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ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profile: Herpesviridae 2021

Journal of General Virology, 2021
Daniel P Depledge   +2 more
exaly  

Herpesviridae in critically ill hematology patients: HHV-6 is associated with worse clinical outcome

Journal of Critical Care, 2021
Laurent Chow-Chine   +2 more
exaly  

[The significance of herpesviridae in ophthalmology].

Fortschritte der Medizin, 1989
Herpesviruses are the most common causes of infection-related loss of vision or blindness in our part of the world. A better understanding of the underlying pathophysiology, together with major pharmaceutical advances have led to medical and surgical therapy which enables us to preserve or restore useful vision in most patients.
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Herpesviridae

1995
Andrew J. Davison, Duncan J. McGeoch
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Avian Herpesviruses (Herpesviridae)

2021
Vishwanatha R.A.P. Reddy, Venugopal Nair
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Capitolo 44 Herpesviridae

2012
In questo capitolo, che fa parte di un libro di Testo Universitario, si descrivono gli Herpesvirus che sono virus molto diffusi in natura e possono infettare la maggior parte delle specie animali, dai pesci ai mammiferi, per un totale di almeno 130 specie differenti.
MANSERVIGI, Roberto   +1 more
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Infections à Herpesviridae

2008
Dans la famille des Herpesviridae, huit virus sont strictement humains et sont la cause d’infections dont les manifestations cliniques sont differentes, avec des presentations dermatologiques souvent similaires. On distingue trois sous-familles : les alpha-, les beta- et les gamma-Herpesviridae (tableau 31.1).
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