Results 181 to 190 of about 53,999 (225)
Pulmonary oedema in vivax malaria
S Pukrittayakamee, Nicholas J White
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The American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1986
Malaria occurs in the United States infrequently and is found exclusively among immigrants and travelers returning from areas where the disease is endemic. Cases of acute relapses of Plasmodium vivax infection can present to the emergency department. Patients are often immigrants from developing countries who were symptom-free in this country for weeks
P B, Baker, S C, Dronen
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Malaria occurs in the United States infrequently and is found exclusively among immigrants and travelers returning from areas where the disease is endemic. Cases of acute relapses of Plasmodium vivax infection can present to the emergency department. Patients are often immigrants from developing countries who were symptom-free in this country for weeks
P B, Baker, S C, Dronen
openaire +2 more sources
Retinal haemorrhage in vivax malaria
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2004Retinal haemorrhage is often observed in patients with Plasmodium falciparum, especially when combined with cerebral malaria. However, few cases of retinopathy have been reported in P. vivax malaria. Benign tertian malaria has re-emerged among soldiers in the South Korean demilitarized zone since 1993.
H J, Choi, S Y, Lee, H, Yang, J K, Bang
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The paroxysm of Plasmodium vivax malaria
Trends in Parasitology, 2003The paroxysms of Plasmodium vivax malaria are antiparasite responses that, although distressing to the human host, almost never impart serious acute pathology. Using plasma and blood cells from P. vivax patients, the cellular and noncellular mediators of these events have been studied ex vivo. The host response during a P.
Nadira D, Karunaweera +4 more
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Primaquine-tolerant vivax malaria in Thailand
Annals of Tropical Medicine & Parasitology, 1997(1997). Primaquine-tolerant vivax malaria in Thailand. Annals of Tropical Medicine & Parasitology: Vol. 91, No. 8, pp. 939-943.
S, Looareesuwan +11 more
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Plasmodium vivax malaria in the UK
BMJ, 2015New insights into an old enemy Plasmodium falciparum malaria is so lethal and ubiquitous that one could easily forget that other species of malaria are globally important too. In particular, Plasmodium vivax , the main cause of relapsing malaria, affects up to 300 million people annually, and occurs in far wider and ecologically diverse settings than ...
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Susceptibility to vivax malaria in Ethiopia
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1978Plasmodium vivax prevalence rates for Nilotic and Hamitic-Semitic residents of an Ethiopian town were compared. Over a ten-year period, 8,316 blood films from Nilotes were examined and 59 P. vivax infections (0.7%) were diagnosed. In 1,630 films from Hamito-Semites, 75 probable P. vivax infections (4.6%) were found.
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