Results 251 to 260 of about 141,323 (284)

Access to Rabies Post-Exposure Prophylaxis in Tanzania: A mixed-methods and theoretically-informed study to inform policy and practise

open access: yes
Lushasi K   +12 more
europepmc   +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Related searches:

Rabies

The American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1986
Medical science has evolved tremendously from the days when local cauterization was used to treat victims of rabies exposure. Indeed, with appropriate wound care and vaccination procedures, human rabies is a preventable disease. Despite these advances, physicians treating the uncommon but very dramatic cases of human rabies have not been so successful.
F H, Kauffman, B J, Goldmann
openaire   +4 more sources

Rabies

Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, 2006
Despite increases in our understanding of rabies pathogenesis, it remains an inevitably fatal disease. Lack of awareness, low level of political commitment to rabies control, and failure to recognize and correlate clinical, laboratory, and neuroimaging features contribute to continuing deaths. Clinical symptomatology, once believed to be unique, may be
Thiravat, Hemachudha   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Rabies

JAMA, 2023
This JAMA Patient Page describes rabies and its symptoms, diagnosis, and prevention measures.
openaire   +2 more sources

Rabies

Neurologic Clinics, 1984
Rabies is universally fatal once the characteristic clinical symptoms appear and has been recognized as a specific, dramatic disease throughout recorded history. The authors give the history, epidemiology, clinical manifestations, pathology, and preventative and postexposure methods of dealing with this disease.
K P, Johnson, P T, Swoveland
openaire   +2 more sources

Rabies

Nature Reviews Disease Primers, 2017
Rabies is a life-threatening neglected tropical disease: tens of thousands of cases are reported annually in endemic countries (mainly in Africa and Asia), although the actual numbers are most likely underestimated. Rabies is a zoonotic disease that is caused by infection with viruses of the Lyssavirus genus, which are transmitted via the saliva of an ...
Anthony R, Fooks   +10 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Rabies

Journal of Special Operations Medicine, 2013
Rabies has been a scourge of mankind since antiquity. The name itself, ?rabies? is derived from the ancient Sanskrit rabhas meaning ?to do violence? and has been found described in medical writings several thousand years old. The rabies virus is an RNA virus of the family Rhabdoviridae (Greek for ?rod-shaped virus?), genus Lyssavirus (Lyssa being the ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Rabies

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 1987
The practicing veterinarian has a key role to play in rabies control in the maintenance of protection in the companion animal populations, in the education of the pet-owning community on rabies, and in the decision-making process that accompanies human exposure to potentially rabid animals. This role encompasses far more than the routine maintenance of
openaire   +2 more sources

Rabies: zoonotic rabies

2016
This chapter examines rabies, a devastating disease of animals that is comparatively rarely transmitted to humans and has been recognized since the dawn of history. It appeared in the Babylonian Eshnunna Code before 2300 bc. The infection spread to Europe and then to the world both by natural migration and colonial activity.
John Oxford, Paul Kellam, Leslie Collier
openaire   +1 more source

Rabies

New England Journal of Medicine, 1993
D B, Fishbein, L E, Robinson
openaire   +3 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy