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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0009450 (
infectious diseases
)
83,438
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Infection
rate of imported monkeys, under this study, with intestinal protozoa is higher than the infection rate with intestinal nematodes. Mostly encountered protozoa were E. coli, E. nana, E. histolytica and I. butschlii. Formalin-Ether concentration method yielded higher % positive for E. histolytica than the culture method using Tanabe-Chiba medium, but the results obtained from these 2 methods correlate perfectly well with each other. Efficacy of thiabendazole against intestinal nematodes such as Strongyloides, Trichuris, Physaloptera, Oesophagostomum and Capillaria was very satisfactory.
Int J
Zoonoses
1980 Jun
PMID:Studies on the examination of imported laboratory monkey, Macaca fascicularis for E. histolytica and other intestinal parasites. 625 21
Infection
with Corynebacterium ulcerans has been previously reported in association with cows' milk. Further evidence that the disease is a
zoonosis
is given in this report of infection in a consumer of untreated milk. The organism was isolated from a sample of milk, and from two cows in a herd of 93 Jersey cattle. One of the farm workers was a symptomless nasal carrier.
...
PMID:Corynebacterium ulcerans infection associated with untreated milk. 652 44
Dirofilariasis is now recognized as a
zoonosis
.
Infection
of humans occurs when a mosquito that has obtained larvae-containing blood from an infected animal transmits the larvae, after they have developed to the infective stage, to a human. Dirofilarial infections in humans have been reported from around the world. In this paper a case is reported in which subcutaneous dirofilariasis in a human presented as a lump in the breast. The epidemiologic and pathogenetic features of this disease are discussed.
...
PMID:Dirofilariasis presenting as a breast lump. 673 31
Campylobacter jejuni (previously called "related vibrio") has recently become recognized as an important cause of acute diarrhoeal disease in many countries. As with other intestinal pathogens, the clinical picture of C. jejuni infection varies from symptomless excretion to severe disease. The incubation period averages two to five days. Fever, abdominal pain and bloody diarrhoea are the usual symptoms of campylobacter enteritis. Although it is normally a self-limiting disease, complications such as cholecystitis, peritonitis, septicaemia and meningitis occasionally arise. The small intestine is thought to be the main site of infection, but the colon is also regularly involved. The disease might be more accurately described as an enterocolitis. Campylobacters, like salmonellae and yersiniae, are thought to be pathogenic by virtue of their invasive ability. Chemotherapy is usually effective. Erythromycin is commonly used for patients ill enough to require specific treatment. Although the infection can be transmitted from person to person, it is mainly a
zoonosis
with many possible routes of infection. Poultry is a potential source of infection, dogs may also transmit the disease and there have been major outbreaks of campylobacter enteritis from the consumption of untreated or inadequately treated milk and water. Further epidemiological work is hampered by the lack of suitable typing techniques.
Infection
1982
PMID:Campylobacter Enteritis. 710 20
Communication between the medical, veterinary and environmental health professions has been established in Scotland since the early 1970s and was strengthened by the introduction of the
Zoonoses
Order 1975. The secondment of a veterinary officer to the
Communicable Diseases
(Scotland) Unit in Glasgow provides veterinary expertise on matters relating to public health, in addition to improving liaison, surveillance and the other functions of the unit.
...
PMID:Interprofessional liaison in Scotland. 717 75
The European-American exchange of
infectious diseases
was responsible for the demographic havoc of the native population in the New World after 1492. Prior to this date medical writers describe the presence in Spain of viral diseases like influenza, parotitis, smallpox, measles, poliomyelitis, and rabies; there were also rickettsiasis, diphtheria, salmonellosis, plague, tubercolosis, leprosy, malaria, scabies and tinea. In America, before European arrivals, there were no records of human viral diseases, though there were records of rickettsiasis, treponematosis--pinta, yaws and syphilis--leihsmaniasis, amibiasis and perhaps leprosy. With the discovery of America in 1492, Columbus's sailors were contaminated by yaws and spread this disease into Europe. In 1493 influenza, as a
zoonosis
, was introduced into Santo Domingo and was responsible for the annihilation of the natives of the Antilles in less than a quarter of a century; in 1518 smallpox was also introduced in Santo Domingo and then to the American continent by negro slaves: by the same means measles were introduced in 1531. The previous existence or introduction of other
infectious diseases
in America is also discussed.
...
PMID:The European-American exchange. 752 30
Zoonoses
can be defined as
infectious diseases
that are transmitted from vertebrate animals to man under natural conditions. Applying this definition, a review is presented of zoonoses, occurring in the Netherlands. Data about this group of
infectious diseases
were collected from public health and veterinary data sources. From the results of the inventory it can be concluded that the major part of the zoonoses is caused by foodborne infections. It has been estimated that yearly a total number of 420,000 persons suffer from Salmonella and Campylobacter infections. The remaining zoonoses under study were found to be of limited importance for the general population; because of their concentration in some professional groups and because of the availability of preventive measures, these infections are important in certain subgroups of the population.
...
PMID:[Zoonoses as a public health problem]. 759 87
Leptospirosis is an uncommon
zoonosis
. As a systemic
infectious disease
, leptospirosis usually is characterized by multisystem involvement. Pulmonary involvement with leptospirosis often is manifested by respiratory symptoms, but pneumonia commonly is not a prominent clinical manifestation of the illness. We report a case of fulminant leptospiral pneumonia in which pulmonary manifestations were primary clinical features of the illness.
...
PMID:Leptospiral pneumonia. 765 49
The English-speaking Caribbean is in transition toward
communicable disease
health patterns seen in the more developed world. Structural adjustment policies in recent years have weakened control measures, such as water supply and sanitation, as illustrated by recent outbreaks of typhoid fever in Jamaica (1990-1991), increased malaria incidence in Suriname and Guyana (with temporary importation into southern Trinidad in 1991), an upswing in tuberculosis in some countries, and the occurrence of cholera outbreaks in Belize, Suriname, and Guyana. The emergence of epidemic cholera throughout most of Latin America in 1991, and Caribbean mainland countries in 1992, aroused concern. Deteriorating socioeconomic conditions and the consequent
communicable disease
risk underscored the absence of
communicable disease
control in the Caribbean Cooperation in Health (CCH) strategy which was adopted in 1986 by the countries of the Caribbean Community. The Caribbean Epidemiology Center (CAREC) offered the following analysis: At least four out of seven CCH priorities already directly address critical aspects of
communicable disease
control, and therefore the question arises whether
communicable disease
control should be recognized as an explicit CCH priority. Beyond cholera and the diseases already represented in the CCH strategy, there are only a few other communicable diseases that warrant specific attention at this time: tuberculosis; leprosy, which CAREC member countries may want to eradicate; and leptospirosis, a
zoonosis
(
communicable disease
of animals transmissible to humans) thought to be the most frequent disease of this type in the Caribbean. These three conditions are insufficient to justify a distinct
communicable disease
grouping within CCH. However, if all communicable diseases of public health importance were to be grouped together (AIDS/STD, vaccine-preventable diseases, food- and waterborne diseases, vector-borne diseases), such a group would be important enough to justify a distinct priority category, with several major subcategories.
...
PMID:Communicable disease control as a Caribbean public health priority. 801 35
A hypothesis on the Achaean disease. Analyzing the text in the light of the modern medical knowledge, the article traces a profile of the mortal illness described in the first book of Homer's Iliad. The disease was a severe, acute epidemic
zoonosis
, rapidly bringing death. First, it affected mules and dogs, then it involved men; the infection spread quickly and the number of deaths was high. These elements suggest that the illness occurred among the Achaeans can be identified with glanders, an
infectious disease
affecting primarily mules and horses that can be transmitted to man by contact with these animals.
...
PMID:[Hypothesis on the Achean disease]. 823 62
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