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Plague: Bridging gaps towards better disease control.
After centuries of epidemics and more than a hundred years since the identification of the causative bacterium, very little is known about the plague dynamics in animal reservoirs, vectors and the changing vulnerabilities for humans. The recent plague epidemic in Madagascar in 2017 highlights these gaps existing within the knowledge of the disease ...
Eric D'Ortenzio+7 more
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Plague: disease, management, and recognition of act of terrorism.
Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 2006J. Koirala
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Freshwater Crayfish, 2020
The crayfish plague disease agent, Aphanomyces astaci, has coevolved with the native European crayfish since its arrival to mainland Europe in the 1860s. There are indications that some of the A.
J. Jussila+4 more
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The crayfish plague disease agent, Aphanomyces astaci, has coevolved with the native European crayfish since its arrival to mainland Europe in the 1860s. There are indications that some of the A.
J. Jussila+4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Freshwater Science, 2019
The American rusty crayfish, Faxonius rusticus, is an invasive species in parts of North America where it displaces native crayfish species. In Europe, various invasive North American crayfish species are carriers of the crayfish plague disease agent ...
Jörn Panteleit+7 more
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The American rusty crayfish, Faxonius rusticus, is an invasive species in parts of North America where it displaces native crayfish species. In Europe, various invasive North American crayfish species are carriers of the crayfish plague disease agent ...
Jörn Panteleit+7 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
A New Living Vaccine against Fowl Plague Disease [PDF]
IN a previous investigation1 three attenuated substrains from a pea fowl strain were obtained by serial passages mainly in pigeon embryos. One of these substrains (PEC2 P11 C30)—that is, pea fowl strain subjected to 2 passages in chick-embryos, 11 in pigeon-embryos and 30 in chick-embryos successively—was subjected for further attenuation to more than ...
George IS-HAK Mickail
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White plague disease outbreak in a coral reef at Los Roques National Park, Venezuela.
Revista de Biología Tropical, 2003Coral diseases have been reported as a major problem affecting Caribbean coral reefs. During August 2000, a coral mortality event of White Plague Disease-II (WPD-II) was observed at Madrizqui Reef in Los Roques National Park, Venezuela.
A. Cróquer+2 more
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Crohn's disease and the ‘white plague’: a hypothesis
Gut, 2013The article by Yang et al 1 contributes to the emerging evidence that genetic predisposition to Crohn's Disease (CD) has an ethnicity-specific variation.s1–s4 The genetic architecture of autoimmune and inflammatory diseases has been subject to recent positive selection in human history, probably driven by the historical exposure to pathogens.2 s5–s7 ...
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2014
This chapter reviews the changing epidemiology of plague over the past several decades and discusses factors of plague emergence or re-emergence. Three biotypes of Yersinia pestis, classified according to their ability to ferment glycerol and reduce nitrate, are correlated with the three major plague pandemics of history.
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This chapter reviews the changing epidemiology of plague over the past several decades and discusses factors of plague emergence or re-emergence. Three biotypes of Yersinia pestis, classified according to their ability to ferment glycerol and reduce nitrate, are correlated with the three major plague pandemics of history.
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Algorithms in the Diagnosis and Management of Exotic Diseases. XXV. Plague
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1977Plague is an acute bacterial infection of man caused by Yersinia pestis. The natural reservoirs of the organism are predominantly urban and sylvatic rodents, and it is transmitted among animals and occasionally to man by bites of infected fleas. Plague has a cosmopolitan distribution with significant foci of infection in the Americas, Africa, and Asia.
Adel A. F. Mahmoud+2 more
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