Results 11 to 20 of about 1,705,041 (354)
Ebola virus disease [PDF]
Nature Reviews Disease Primers, 2020 (Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) Ebola virus disease (EVD) is a severe and frequently lethal disease caused by Ebola virus (EBOV). EVD outbreaks typically start from a single case of probable zoonotic transmission, followed by human-to-human transmission via direct contact or contact with infected bodily fluids or contaminated fomites.Jacob, Shevin, Crozier, Ian, Fischer, William A., Hewlett, Angela, Kraft, Colleen S., Vega, Marc-Antoine de La, Soka, Moses J., Wahl, Victoria, Griffiths, Anthony, Bollinger, Laura, Kuhn, Jens H. +10 moreopenaire +5 more sourcesEbola Virus Disease [PDF]
Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology, 2014 Ebola virus disease (Ebola hemorrhagic fever) first appeared in 1976 with two concurrent outbreaks of acute viral hemorrhagic fever involving 284 cases (151 deaths [53%]) centred in Nzara, Sudan (1), and 318 cases (280 deaths [88%]) in Yambuku (near the Ebola River), Democratic Republic of Congo (2).Laupland, Kevin B., Valiquette, Louis +13 more sourcesEbola virus disease [PDF]
Journal of the Chinese Medical Association, 2015 Nurses are the largest group of health care providers and, therefore, are often at the forefront of epidemics: responding, treating, educating, and coordinating care as needed. But what happens when nurses are afraid of contracting an illness and decide to leave the workplace?Nadia Laverne, Etienne, Candace, Burns, Helen Acree, Conlon +2 more +8 more sourcesDistribution and incidence of viruses in Irish seed potato crops [PDF]
, 2015 peer-reviewedVirus diseases are of key importance in potato production and in particular for the production of disease-free potato seed. However, there is little known about the frequency and distribution of potato virus diseases in Ireland.Bonner, D., Doherty, G., Griffin, Denis, Hunter, A., Hutton, Fiona, Kildea, Steven, Spink, John +6 morecore +1 more sourcePotential vectors of bluetongue virus in high altitude areas of Yunnan Province, China
Parasites & Vectors, 2019 Background Bluetongue disease of ruminants is a typical insect-borne disease caused by bluetongue virus (BTV) of the genus Orbivirus (family Reoviridae) and transmitted by some species of Culicoides (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae).Ying Liang Duan, Glenn Bellis, Le Li, Hua Chun Li, Hai Sheng Miao, Mei Ling Kou, De Fang Liao, Zheng Wang, Lin Gao, Ji Zhong Li +9 moredoaj +1 more sourceMacaque models of human infectious disease. [PDF]
, 2008 Macaques have served as models for more than 70 human infectious diseases of diverse etiologies, including a multitude of agents-bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites, prions.Abe, Adams, Ahmed, Ajariyakhajorn, Albrecht, Allen, Apetrei, Apetrei, Arroyo, Bai, Bannantine, Barker, Barnett, Barouch, Baskerville, Baskin, Baze, Bennett, Blanchard, Blaney, Bons, Boonjakuakul, Breitschwerdt, Brooks, Brown, Bruce, Campos, Capone, Capone, Carbone, Carlson, Carlson, CARVALHO, Chan, Chattopadhyay, Chen, Chen, Chenine, Choi, Chomel, Choo, Chopra, Christe, Coalson, Coban, Cohen, Cohen, Contreras, Courgnaud, Custer, Cypess, Daddario-DiCaprio, Daddario-Dicaprio, Dalgard, Daniel, de Swart, Dezzutti, Di Giulio, Dittmer, Doi, Donnelly, Dubois, Dubois, Dutta, Earl, Edghill-Smith, Edghill-Smith, Ekanayake, Engel, Escalante, Espana, Farber, Feichtinger, Fisher-Hoch, Fisher-Hoch, Fitzgeorge, Fogg, Foley, Foucault, Fritz, Frolova, Gajdusek, Gallinella, Gao, Gardner, Gardner, Gardner, Gaynor, Geisbert, Geisbert, Geisbert, Geisbert, Gheit, Gibbs, Giddens, Goldstein, Gonder, Good, Gormus, Gormus, Goverdhan, Graczyk, Graff, Gray, Green, Guirakhoo, Haagmans, Haase, Habis, Hambleton, Hansen, Hawley, Heise, Heraud, Herzog, Hessell, Hicks, Higashi, Hirano, Hirsch, Hooper, Hotez, Hubbert, Hull, Hunsmann, Hutin, Ilyinskii, Inoue, Ivanoff, Jahrling, Ji, Johnson, Johnson, Jones-Engel, Jones-Engel, Kao, Kawai, Kawai, Kennedy, Kenyon, Kestler, Kinsey, Kishimoto, Klingstrom, Klumpp, Kobasa, Kobune, Kodama, Kornegay, Kuiken, Kuiken, Kunz, Kutok, Kwang, Lackner, Lake-Bakaar, Lasm zas, Le Bras, Leong, Leroy, Letvin, Letvin, Letvin, Levine, Li, Li, Lichtenwalner, Lindsley, Line, Ling, Linial, Lockridge, Lodmell, Lowenstine, Lukashevich, Lukashevich, Lusso, Maddison, Mankowski, Mansfield, Mansfield, Marra, Marthas, Marthas, Marx, Mason, Masters, Matz-Rensing, Maul, McArthur-Vaughan, McMichael, McNeely, McShane, Meisenhelder, Mense, Miller, Miyoshi, Moghaddam, Monath, Mon , Mooser, Morris, Morton, Mulder, Murphey-Corb, Murphy, Murphy, Myint, Nagle, NI, North, Novembre, O'Rourke, O'Sullivan, O'Sullivan, Olson, Ostrow, Ostrow, Oswald, Pachner, Pachner, Pachner, Pahar, Palmer, Palmer, Patton, Patton, Paul, Peiris, Percy, Perelygina, Permar, Persson, Peters, Peters, Petschow, Philipp, Philipp, Phipps, Pialoux, Pletnev, Polack, Pung, Puri, Raengsakulrach, Raether, Ratterree, Reed, Reimann, Reindel, Renne, Rhesus Macaque Genome Sequencing and Analysis Cons, Rimmelzwaan, Rimmelzwaan, Rivailler, Rockx, Rodas, Rue, Ruff, Russell, Saadat, Sale, Samuel, Sato, Schou, Schou, Schricker, Schultz, Sequar, Sestak, Shah, Shen, Shevtsova, Shuto, Simoes, Smit-McBride, Smith, Smith, Soike, Solnick, Solnick, Spencer, Stittelaar, Stittelaar, Stittelaar, Stokes, Subekti, Suss, Tanaka, Tanghe, Taylor, Taylor, Tribe, Tulis, Turell, Uberla, van den Hoogen, van Gorder, Van Heuverswyn, Van Rompay, Van Voorhis, Vasconcelos, Vasconcelos, Veazey, Voevodin, Vogel, Walsh, WALSH, Weinmann, Weiss, Wells, Wengelnik, Wenner, Westerman, White, Whitney, Williamson, Williamson, Willy, Wobus, Wolf, Wolfe, Wood, Wright, Wyatt, Xu, Yalcin, Zaucha, Zhou, Zuckerman, Zumpe +330 morecore +1 more sourceThe Infectious Disease Ontology in the Age of COVID-19 [PDF]
, 2021 The Infectious Disease Ontology (IDO) is a suite of interoperable ontology modules that aims to provide coverage of all aspects of the infectious disease domain, including biomedical research, clinical care, and public health.Babcock, Shane, Beverley, John, Cowell, Lindsay G., Smith, Barry +3 morecore +1 more sourceDiagnosis of childhood tuberculosis and host RNA expression in Africa [PDF]
, 2014 Improved diagnostic tests for tuberculosis in children are needed. We hypothesized that transcriptional signatures of host blood could be used to distinguish tuberculosis from other diseases in African children who either were or were not infected with ...Amelia C. Crampin, Andrew J. Brent, Brian Eley, Claire M. Banwell, Eamranond P, Florian Kern, George Chagaluka, Hazel M. Dockrell, Hemed Twahir, Hesseling AC, J. Anthony G. Scott, Lachlan J. Coin, Ling Ling, Martin L. Hibberd, Melissa S. Hamilton, Michael Levin, Myrsini Kaforou, Neil French, Paul R. Langford, Rachel Mlotha, Robert J. Wilkinson, Robert S. Heyderman, Sandy Pienaar, Suzanne T. Anderson, Tom H.M. Ottenhoff, Vashini Pillay, Victoria J. Wright +26 morecore +5 more sources