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Detection of autoantibodies against exocrine pancreas by double immunodiffusion testing [PDF]
Horbach, E. +5 more
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MARBURG-VIRUS DISEASE IN KENYA
The Lancet, 1982Abstract The third known outbreak of Marburg-virus disease occurred in Kenya in 1980. The index patient acquired infection in western Kenya, and a doctor in close contact with the patient terminally during a massive haematemesis developed infection in Nairobi. There was no further evidence of nosocomial transmission.
D H, Smith +8 more
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Marburg Virus Disease in Ghana
New England Journal of Medicine, 2023Joseph K. Bonney +28 more
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HUMAN DISEASE FROM MONKEYS (MARBURG VIRUS)
The Lancet, 1968H, Malherbe, M, Strickland-Cholmley
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[Ebola and Marburg virus disease].
Deutsche medizinische Wochenschrift (1946), 2023Viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHF) are serious, often fatal diseases that affect humans and non-human primates. The nomenclature of these diseases has changed in that they are now referred to as viral diseases because the previously named symptoms of fever or hemorrhages are not obligatory.
Stefan, Schmiedel, Timo, Wolf
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Green Monkey Disease ("Marburg Virus" Disease): A New Zoonosis
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1969Excerpt During August and September 1967, an epidemic of a previously undescribed human disease occurred which was related to contact with African green monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops) (1-8).
J P, Luby, C V, Sanders
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1980
Between 8 August and 10 September 1967, 30 cases of a previ- ously unknown and highly lethal disease occurred as an explo- sive epidemic which affected three locations in continental Europe: Marburg, Frankfurt and Belgrade. A thirty-first case occurred on 8 November.
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Between 8 August and 10 September 1967, 30 cases of a previ- ously unknown and highly lethal disease occurred as an explo- sive epidemic which affected three locations in continental Europe: Marburg, Frankfurt and Belgrade. A thirty-first case occurred on 8 November.
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Marburg Virus Disease. Clinical Syndrome
1971During the last years monkeys from tropical countries, especially green monkeys (certopithecus and macacus), were imported. Originally they were used for pharmacological and physiological experiments. Since it has turned out that kidney cells of monkeys are very convenient for breeding pathogenous viruses, millions of monkeys were needed by virological
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