Results 171 to 180 of about 8,964 (217)
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Isospora and Traveler's Diarrhea
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1987Excerpt To the editor: Diarrhea in travelers returning home has many possible causes. Ma and associates (1) reported diarrhea caused by cryptosporidiosis in heterosexual and otherwise healthy trave...
TEJAS GODIWALA, ROBERT YAEGER
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1992
The coccidian Cryptosporidium spp., Isospora belli, Sarcocystis suihominis and S. bovihominis are intestinal parasites of humans. Coccidia are obligate parasitic intracellular protozoa, with a typical apical complex seen with the electron microscope. There are species with a single host (monoxenous) and species with a definitive (or final) host and an ...
Alain Bonnin +2 more
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The coccidian Cryptosporidium spp., Isospora belli, Sarcocystis suihominis and S. bovihominis are intestinal parasites of humans. Coccidia are obligate parasitic intracellular protozoa, with a typical apical complex seen with the electron microscope. There are species with a single host (monoxenous) and species with a definitive (or final) host and an ...
Alain Bonnin +2 more
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Isospora infection in a homosexual man
Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease, 1985A case of Isospora belli in a homosexual male is described. The procedures used for recovery and staining the cyst stages of Isospora are included.
L M, Kobayashi +3 more
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Progress in clinical parasitology, 1991
I. belli is common in tropical and subtropical environments. Sporadic outbreaks have occurred in mental institutions and in day-care centers in the United States. The infection is common in immunosuppressed patients, particularly those with AIDS living in tropical areas. Transmission probably occurs by the fecal-oral route.
J W, Pape, W D, Johnson
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I. belli is common in tropical and subtropical environments. Sporadic outbreaks have occurred in mental institutions and in day-care centers in the United States. The infection is common in immunosuppressed patients, particularly those with AIDS living in tropical areas. Transmission probably occurs by the fecal-oral route.
J W, Pape, W D, Johnson
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ISOSPORA HOMINIS INFECTION IN MAN
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1946Isospora hominis infection in man, sometimes termed human coccidiosis, is a rare and poorly understood disease, the pathogenicity of the organism even being open to some question. Despite the recognition of some 240 cases, the bulk of them occurring in World War I in the Mediterranean area, it has been possible to study very few from the clinical ...
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Rodents as Vectors for Feline Coccidia, Isospora felis and Isospora rivolta
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1972J K, Frenkel, J P, Dubey
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