Results 261 to 270 of about 9,277,402 (300)
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Marburg agent disease: In monkeys
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1969Abstract The experimental infection of vervet, rhesus and squirrel monkeys is described. All the monkeys developed a uniformly fatal illness irrespective of the dose or route of infection. In the early stages of illness the animals appeared to be quite healthy, but after incubation periods of 6–13 days they rapidly deteriorated. A petechial skin rash
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, 2006
This unique volume is a comprehensive, well-illustrated study of the organization of the white matter pathways of the brain. Schmahmann and Pandya have analyzed and synthesized the corticocortical and corticosubcortical connections of the major areas of ...
J. Schmahmann, D. Pandya
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This unique volume is a comprehensive, well-illustrated study of the organization of the white matter pathways of the brain. Schmahmann and Pandya have analyzed and synthesized the corticocortical and corticosubcortical connections of the major areas of ...
J. Schmahmann, D. Pandya
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“B” Virus Disease in Monkey and Man
British Veterinary Journal, 1966SUMMARY “B” virus causes a benign disease of monkeys characterized by a herpes-like stomatitis which heals spontaneously in seven to 14 days. However, when the virus is established in man by accidental monkey-bite or from infected tissues or fluids, it may produce a fatal encephalitis or encephalomyelitis.
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Agent of Disease Contracted from Green Monkeys
Science, 1968An infectious agent obtained from patients who became ill after exposure to tissues of African green monkeys is viral in character. By electron microscopy, the agent appeared cylindrical, 90 to 100 nanometers in diameter, and 130 to 2600 nanometers in length.
Roslyn Q. Robinson+3 more
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, 1961
Champion, H. G. 1936. A preliminary survey of the forest types of India and Burma. Indian Forest Records (Silviculture Series), Vol. 1, No. 1. Manson-Bahr, P. H. 1954. Manson's Tropical Diseases. 14 Ed., London, Cassell and Co. Nolte, A. 1955.
J. Connell
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Champion, H. G. 1936. A preliminary survey of the forest types of India and Burma. Indian Forest Records (Silviculture Series), Vol. 1, No. 1. Manson-Bahr, P. H. 1954. Manson's Tropical Diseases. 14 Ed., London, Cassell and Co. Nolte, A. 1955.
J. Connell
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The rhesus monkey as a model for the study of infectious disease
American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1973AbstractModels for bacterial and viral infections and intoxication were developed in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). Manifestations of acute‐phase illnesses, e.g., temperature, white blood cell (WBC) counts, blood cultures, etc., were monitored at regular intervals.
Michael D. Kastello, Richard O. Spertzel
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Asphyxia and Hyaline Membrane Disease in Neonatal Monkeys
American Journal of Perinatology, 1985An animal model for studying the relationship between perinatal asphyxia and hyaline membrane disease (HMD) is described. The HMD developed in these Macaca mulatta (rhesus) and M. arctoides (stump tail) monkeys was clinically, physiologically, and histologically similar to that seen in human infants.
Barry V. Kirkpatrick+5 more
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Menetrier’s Disease in a Rhesus Monkey (Macaco mulatta)
Journal of Medical Primatology, 1979Gross and microscopic features closely resembling those found in Menetrier's disease in man are described in a 20-month-old rhesus monkey. The gastric lining was characterized by greatly enlarged rugae caused by mucosal hypertrophy and hyperplasia along with outfolding of the muscularis mucosa and the submucosa.
Estsuro Uemura+2 more
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Valvular heart disease in the monkey (Macaca mulatta)
American Heart Journal, 1966Abstract Valvular heart disease of unknown etiology is described in each of 2 monkeys. One had chronic scarring of the mitral valve, which was both stenotic and incompetent, and the second had acute nectrotizing inflammation of the aortic valve, which was stenotic, and of one cusp of the mitral valve.
William C. Roberts, J.R.M. Innes
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FATAL HUMAN DISEASE FROM VERVET MONKEYS
The Lancet, 1967Abstract About thirty cases of acute illness, with 7 deaths, presented in laboratory workers handling tissues from vervet monkeys imported from East Africa. Both blood and tissues from these patients proved infective to guineapigs and the agent has been maintained in nine serial passages in these animals.
I. Zlotnik+3 more
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