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Slow virus infections

Survey of Ophthalmology, 1977
Slow viruses produce diseases whose incubation periods range from several months to many years. Because of this long latency period, the lack of inflammation produced by these diseases and the lack of recoverable virus particles, it is only recently that the association has been made between the viruses and the diseases they cause.
J D, Fratkin, A G, Smith
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Slow Virus Infections

Hospital Practice, 1971
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, together with some other neurologic disorders, fits the definition of a “slow infection” in requiring an incubation period of years (rather than days or weeks), and its viral origin now appears to be confirmed by the recovery of an agent resembling measles virus from cultures of affected brain material. The probable
Samuel L. Katz, John F. Griffith
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Slow-virus-Infektionen

2020
Slow-virus-Infektionen sind durch eine lange Inkubationszeit und einen meist sehr langen Krankheitsverlauf gekennzeichnet. Sie fuhren zu chronisch-neurologischen, immer letal endenden Erkrankungen. Sie werden durch konventionelle Viren (u. a. Masernviren, Papoaviren) oder durch sog. Prionen ausgelost. Die Pathogenese ist in allen Fallen noch unbekannt.
Volker Schuster, Hans-Wolfgang Kreth
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Borna—A slow virus disease

Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, 1978
Abstract Borna is an ideal model for the study of the pathogenesis of slow virus diseases. Our present knowledge of the nature of the agent, the immunology, the pathogenesis, the different courses of infection and diagnosis is described. The wide host and cell spectrum of Borna virus leads one to suppose that Borna infections are more widespread ...
A, Mayr, K, Danner
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[Slow virus infection].

Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine, 1997
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) and progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) are the major slow virus infections of humans. SSPE is caused by mutant measles virus after long persistence in the brain. Its pathogenesis is discussed, based on accumulating data on molecular properties on measles virus prevalent in the field as well as ...
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Slow Virus Kidney Disease of Mice

Science, 1967
Preliminary observations based on organ weight differential, renal function, and glomerular lesions in mice infected neonatally with lymphocytic choriomeningitis indicate the presence of a slow virus-induced kidney disease of mice. This condition is accompanied by a marked decrease in the size of the kidneys, with progressive diminution of renal ...
F D, Baker, J, Hotchin
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Interspecies Patterns of Slow Virus Diseases

Annual Review of Medicine, 1972
A concise definition of slow virus diseases is difficult to achieve, as criteria for this group of diseases are unclear. It is likely that several types of agents are incorrectly considered as slow viruses at present. As more is learned about them there will probably be considerable reclassification of the diseases so designated.
R W, Leader, A I, Hurvitz
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Slow Virus Diseases

Annual Review of Microbiology, 1974
D A, Fuccillo, J E, Kurent, J L, Sever
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