Results 321 to 330 of about 89,111 (360)
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Zoonoses

The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 1983
Animal-transmitted diseases are remarkable not because they occur frequently but because they are almost always unsuspected and unrecognized. The physician who attends an ill veterinarian or zookeeper will immediately suspect an exotic disease. The pediatrician who attends the child who recently received a puppy for his birthday will not.
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Emerging helminth zoonoses

International Journal for Parasitology, 2000
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) As our ability to recognise and diagnose human disease caused by helminth parasites has improved, so our understanding of the epidemiology and clinical manifestations of these diseases has improved.
Thomas A. Moore, James S. McCarthy
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Gastrointestinal Zoonoses

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 1987
Infectious gastrointestinal diseases affect man and animals throughout the world. Certain etiologic agents (for example, Salmonella spp., Campylobacter jejuni, Yersinia enterocolitica, Cryptosporidia, Strongyloides stercoralis, Echinococcus granulosa) seem to have the potential to be transmitted from pets to people, causing severe disease in the latter.
M D, Willard, B, Sugarman, R D, Walker
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Zoonoses in Practice

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 1993
Twenty-five zoonoses of importance in the United States are focused upon in this article. Each is presented in outline form. Items are presented in a convenient format that can be of use in explaining zoonoses to owners of animals in which a specific zoonoses has been diagnosed.
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FILARIAL INFECTIONS AS ZOONOSES

Journal of Helminthology, 1965
The paper summarises existing information on the role of animals in the transmission of filarial infections to man.Wuclicreria bancrofti has not been found in animals and the parasite has never been transmitted to animals in the laboratory. Although bancrofti-typc microfilariae have been described from a potto (Perodicticus potto) in the Congo, there ...
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Viral zoonoses

Medical Journal of Australia, 1993
Viral zoonoses cause overt disease in humans and other animals or silent infections in animals and overt disease in unnatural hosts such as humans. Often the virus and its animal host have evolved together and learned to live together. Infection may spread freely between the natural host animals and cause no signs of disease, but this balance may be ...
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Pigs and zoonoses

In Practice, 1998
IF all the organisms that could infect pigs, and that in theory might also infect people, were listed without explanation, the list would be long and imposing, but misleading. From the viewpoint of the British pig industry, once the exotic, relatively unimportant and rare zoonoses are removed, the list that remains is less daunting, especially when ...
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Zoonoses

Zoonoses and Public Health, 2007
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