Results 131 to 140 of about 1,345 (164)
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Endemic Nonvenereal Treponematosis (Bejel) in Saudi Arabia
Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1985A total of 2,515 individuals attending a large military hospital in Saudi Arabia who had appropriate radiologic evidence of treponematosis were studied clinically and serologically. The indications are that nonvenereal treponematosis (bejel) exists in considerable numbers among the nomadic communities living in rural areas.
G, Csonka, J, Pace
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Afectación osteoarticular en las treponematosis
EMC - Aparato Locomotor, 2010Las treponematosis son infecciones debidas a bacterias espiroideas que pertenecen al genero Treponema (T.), que forma parte del orden Spirochaetales. Clasicamente, se distingue entre la sifilis venerea, transmitida por T. pallidum spp. pallidum y las treponematosis denominadas «no venereas o endemicas», que incluyen el bejel, transmitido por T ...
F. Banal, A.-R. Ndiaye, D. Lechevalier
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Endemic Treponematosis (Balash or Bejel) in Saudi Arabia
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1952Summary 1. The prevalence of treponematosis among the tribesmen around Badana, Saudi Arabia is 37.8% out of a sample of 81 unselected cases. 2. On the whole, the clinical picture is similar to syphilis and bejel as reported by Hudson, Hasselman, Akrawi and seen by one of us (H. T. C.) in the Deir ez Zor district. 3.
H T, CHAGLASSIAN +2 more
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A Unitarian View of Treponematosis
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine, 1946Summary The problem is largely one of interpretation and of agreement on nomenclature. The unitarian interpretation advanced herein suggests that arguments as to whether syphilis is yaws or not have no meaning when the paramount fact is grasped that both are forms of treponematosis.
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Pre‐Columbian treponematosis in medieval Britain
International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 1991AbstractThere has been much debate regarding the origins of treponemal disease and, in particular, acquired syphilis. Greater numbers of skeletons with apparently diagnostic bone lesions in the New World than in the Old have given rise to the postulate, particularly advanced by American workers, that the disease originated there prior to AD 1492 and ...
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Treponematosis and Man's Social Evolution
American Anthropologist, 1965Abstract:Treponematosis is a disease of four syndromes, caused by Treponema pallidum, constituting a biological gradient in which endemic syphilis is firmly established between venereal syphilis and yaws. Medical history offers many instances of gradual conversion of one syndrome into another under the influence of changes in the environment.
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Treponematosis in Pre‐Spanish Western Micronesia
International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 1996There is no longer any doubt that treponemal infections existed in the pre-Columbian New World. In Europe, a few reported pre-Columbian cases seem to be rather firm both in diagnosis and dating. The possibility of treponema having been brought from the New World by Norsemen has been suggested.
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[Osteoarticular involvement in parasitic diseases: bone treponematosis].
Journal de radiologie, 1999Bone and joint localizations of treponematosis vary greatly although there are many common features. Osteal and periosteal lesions are common. We report radiographic descriptions of bone and joint treponematosis, which must not go unrecognized due to the increasing incidence of these diseases.
C, Arteaga +8 more
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