Results 241 to 250 of about 106,892 (270)
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International Ophthalmology Clinics, 1975
Experience with the vaccine can be summarized as follows: There were minimal problems with neuralgia and neuropathy as a result of the vaccine; vaccinated children were not a significant source of infection to the pregnant woman; the duration of immunity is similar to that obtained with natural rubella virus, but with lower antibody levels; and ...
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Experience with the vaccine can be summarized as follows: There were minimal problems with neuralgia and neuropathy as a result of the vaccine; vaccinated children were not a significant source of infection to the pregnant woman; the duration of immunity is similar to that obtained with natural rubella virus, but with lower antibody levels; and ...
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1967
THE EPIDEMIC of rubella 25 years ago in Australia resulted in the first recognition of the significance of this infection as a cause of defective children. It was following this epidemic that the ophthalmologist Sir Norman Gregg noted a high frequency of cataracts in children and recognized the association between rubella in the first trimester of ...
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THE EPIDEMIC of rubella 25 years ago in Australia resulted in the first recognition of the significance of this infection as a cause of defective children. It was following this epidemic that the ophthalmologist Sir Norman Gregg noted a high frequency of cataracts in children and recognized the association between rubella in the first trimester of ...
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Acta Pathologica Microbiologica Scandinavica Section B Microbiology, 1975
Rubella has been a notifiable disease in Iceland since 1888. In this century rubella epidemics of increasing size have occurred at intervals of 5–10 years. The disease has spread throughout the country. About 75 per cent of the patients were below 15 years of age at the time of the last two epidemics.
H O, Tómasson, H M, Ogmundsdóttir
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Rubella has been a notifiable disease in Iceland since 1888. In this century rubella epidemics of increasing size have occurred at intervals of 5–10 years. The disease has spread throughout the country. About 75 per cent of the patients were below 15 years of age at the time of the last two epidemics.
H O, Tómasson, H M, Ogmundsdóttir
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1970
To the Editor.— Confusion between rubella (German measles) and rubeloa (measles) has complicated rubella vaccination programs across the country. A recent study by Darney and Overton ( J Med Assoc Alabama , 39 :537, 1969) showed that 31% of all parents who refused to return a rubella vaccination permission slip in Barbar County, Alabama, did not ...
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To the Editor.— Confusion between rubella (German measles) and rubeloa (measles) has complicated rubella vaccination programs across the country. A recent study by Darney and Overton ( J Med Assoc Alabama , 39 :537, 1969) showed that 31% of all parents who refused to return a rubella vaccination permission slip in Barbar County, Alabama, did not ...
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The Journal of Pediatrics, 1975
The original concept of the rubella syndrome as a triad of abnormalities affecting the eye, heart, and hearing organs has changed dramatically in the past 30 years. This paper describes the various clinical manifestations of congenital rubella now recognized and the varied consequences of rubella virus infection upon the fetus.
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The original concept of the rubella syndrome as a triad of abnormalities affecting the eye, heart, and hearing organs has changed dramatically in the past 30 years. This paper describes the various clinical manifestations of congenital rubella now recognized and the varied consequences of rubella virus infection upon the fetus.
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Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1969
RUBELLA was first reported to be a distinct disease entity early in the 19th century in Germany. 1 Subsequently, it has become recognized as one of the common infectious diseases of childhood. Outbreaks of rubella have occurred in military recruits, 2,3 in boarding schools, 4 and other confined populations.
J J, Witte +6 more
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RUBELLA was first reported to be a distinct disease entity early in the 19th century in Germany. 1 Subsequently, it has become recognized as one of the common infectious diseases of childhood. Outbreaks of rubella have occurred in military recruits, 2,3 in boarding schools, 4 and other confined populations.
J J, Witte +6 more
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Nursing Standard, 1988
Rubella immunisation must continue, with special attention given to women from ethnic minorities, nulliparous women and women over 25 years old, research from London concludes. A study of 14,752 women attending antenatal classes in three London hospitals between 1981 and 1984 showed that the overall proportion of seronegative women fell from 9.6 per ...
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Rubella immunisation must continue, with special attention given to women from ethnic minorities, nulliparous women and women over 25 years old, research from London concludes. A study of 14,752 women attending antenatal classes in three London hospitals between 1981 and 1984 showed that the overall proportion of seronegative women fell from 9.6 per ...
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Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1966
HEARING defect in the progeny of mothers who suffered rubella in the first trimester of pregnancy is a well-studied phenomenon. To put on a histopathological basis the multitude of clinical observations, two groups of material are available. Elective hysterotomy, upon indication of maternal rubella, yields temporal bones; another group is formed by ...
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HEARING defect in the progeny of mothers who suffered rubella in the first trimester of pregnancy is a well-studied phenomenon. To put on a histopathological basis the multitude of clinical observations, two groups of material are available. Elective hysterotomy, upon indication of maternal rubella, yields temporal bones; another group is formed by ...
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Seminars in Perinatology, 1998
Rubella and rubeola are common viral exanthems that may affect women of reproductive age. Effective vaccination programs have greatly decreased their incidence. Although Rubella is a relatively innocuous illness for the nonpregnant patient, transplacental fetal infection with rubella can result in significant and crippling fetal malformations and ...
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Rubella and rubeola are common viral exanthems that may affect women of reproductive age. Effective vaccination programs have greatly decreased their incidence. Although Rubella is a relatively innocuous illness for the nonpregnant patient, transplacental fetal infection with rubella can result in significant and crippling fetal malformations and ...
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2018
A phenocopy is an individual showing features (phenotype) characteristic of a genotype but produced environmentally rather than genetically (not inherited); these features are not due to mutations, as the underlying DNA sequence of the phenocopy is not altered.
Stephen H, Tsang, Tarun, Sharma
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A phenocopy is an individual showing features (phenotype) characteristic of a genotype but produced environmentally rather than genetically (not inherited); these features are not due to mutations, as the underlying DNA sequence of the phenocopy is not altered.
Stephen H, Tsang, Tarun, Sharma
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