Results 131 to 140 of about 7,027 (175)

SOUTH AMERICAN TRYPANOSOMIASIS (CHAGAS' DISEASE)

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1945
The varied geographic areas in which American troops are stationed or operating in the present war are such as to expose them to a variety of diseases, some of which, though not rarities in the respective locales where infections may occur, are exotic if considered in the light of daily medical practice in the United States. Some of the diseases are of
V, MOSELEY, H, MILLER
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Chagas Disease: South American Trypanosomiasis

2020
A 9-year-old girl presents with fevers and myalgias for the past 3 days. Earlier today, her father noted that her left eyelid appeared “puffy.” The girl and her parents just returned from a 3-week trip to Peru, exploring the coastline and visiting the Incan ruins at Machu Picchu.
Joseph Domachowske, Manika Suryadevara
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IMMUNE RESPONSE TO SOUTH AMERICAN TRYPANOSOMIASIS AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO CHAGAS' DISEASE

British Medical Bulletin, 1985
La trypanosomiase americaine est un probleme majeur de sante publique en Amerique latine. La maladie montre 3 phases distinctes de developpement avec une grande diversite geographique dans sa severite et sa prevalence.
L, Hudson, V, Britten
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PURIFIED TRYPANOSOMA CRUZI SPECIFIC GLYCOPROTEIN FOR DISCRIMINATIVE SEROLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS OF SOUTH AMERICAN TRYPANOSOMIASIS (CHAGAS' DISEASE)

The Lancet, 1983
Chagas' disease, leishmaniasis, and Trypanosoma rangeli infection are endemic and their distributions overlap in vast regions of South and Central America. Serological cross-reactivities can confuse epidemiological studies of these infections, and their differential diagnosis has been assigned a high priority by the World Health Organisation.
M, Schechter   +5 more
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Chagas's Disease (South American Trypanosomiasis): A Bibliography

The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1972
The authors and publishers of this bibliography are to be congratulated for a simple, yet straight-forward, useful and inexpensive publication. It consists of 2,035 references on Chagas's disease and its etiologic agent, Trypanosoma cruzi, plus an author index in a slim, paper-covered volume. References are arranged in numerical order and grouped in 14
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The Treatment of Chagas Disease (South American Trypanosomiasis)

Annals of Internal Medicine, 2006
In this issue, Viotti and colleagues evaluated benznidazole in patients with chronic Chagas disease.
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Immunological consequences of infection and vaccination in South American trypanosomiasis

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1984
Trypanosoma cruziinfection provokes a vigorous immune response that terminates the parasitaemia associated with the acute stage within two to three months of initial infection. Even so, a variable proportion of patients may develop severe Chagas’ disease, often decades after initial infection.
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SOUTH AMERICAN TRYPANOSOMIASIS OF THE MENINGOENCEPHALOMYELITIC TYPE IN NEW YORK

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1929
Trypanosomiasis is a term used to designate the invasion of man and other animals by flagellate parasites of the genus Trypanosoma . Two distinct forms are known in man, the African and the South American. South American trypanosomiasis, called Chagas' disease, is due to T.
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