Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Health_Conditions - Dengue Fever

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 103    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Dengue Fever:     more books (40)
  1. Dengue and Dengue Hemorrahgic Fever by D J Gubler, G Kuno, 1997-01-15
  2. Dengue Fever (Epidemics) by Katherine White, 2003-09
  3. Monograph on Dengue - Dengue Haemorrhagic Fever (South-East Asia Series , No 22)
  4. Dengue Fever - A Medical Dictionary, Bibliography, and Annotated Research Guide to Internet References by Health Publica Icon Health Publications, 2004-01-05
  5. Dengue Haemorrhagic Fever: Diagnosis, Treatment and Control by World Health Organization, 1987-01
  6. Fevers: including general considerations,: typhoid fever, typhus fever, influenza, malarial fever, yellow fever, variola, relapsing fever, Weil's disease, ... dengue, miliary fever, mountain fever, etc. by Augustus Adolph Eshner, 2009-05-01
  7. Hemorrhagic Fevers: Ebola, Marburg Virus, Lassa Fever, Dengue Fever, Dengue Shock Syndrome, Rabbit Haemorrhagic Disease, Hantavirus
  8. Dengue Fever and Other Hemorrhagic Viruses (Deadly Diseases and Epidemics) by Tritha, Ph.D. Chakraborty, 2008-02-28
  9. Dengue Virus (Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology)
  10. Dengue and Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever in the Americas: Guidelines for Prevention and Control (Publicaciones Cientificas (Washington, D.C.), No. 548.)
  11. Dengue fever among U.S. travelers returning from the Dominican Republic -Minnesota and Iowa, 2008.: An article from: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report by D. Neitzel, Rebecca Fisher, et all 2010-06-04
  12. Dengue Fever: An entry from Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine, 3rd ed.</i> by Rosalyn, MD Carson-DeWitt, 2006
  13. Pulmonary hemorrhage syndrome associated with an autochthonous case of dengue hemorrhagic fever.(Case Report): An article from: Southern Medical Journal by Robert F. Setlik, Daniel Ouellette, et all 2004-07-01
  14. Fever screening at airports and imported dengue.(Dispatches): An article from: Emerging Infectious Diseases by Pei-Yun Shu, Li-Jung Chien, et all 2005-03-01

61. Maxygen - Dengue Fever
Cross Protective Dengue Vaccine Maxygen's MAXY1500 has the potentialto prevent dengue fever, a disease that affects millions of people.
http://www.maxygen.com/products-dengue.php
PRESS RELEASES
- Related
- Total
Cross Protective Dengue Vaccine
Maxygen's MAXY-1500 has the potential to prevent Dengue fever, a disease that affects millions of people. We have used our MolecularBreeding™ directed evolution technologies to create antigens that include antigenic components from each of the four types of Dengue virus. This may reduce or eliminate the antigenic competition seen in prior "mixed antigen" approaches. Preliminary results with Maxygen's Dengue vaccine candidates show that they are cross protective. Mouse immunization studies with Maxygen's Dengue vaccine candidates generate antibodies that react with and neutralize growth of all four types of Dengue virus in vitro. Maxygen's cross-protective Dengue vaccine is currently in preclinical development. The Aedes aegypti mosquito transmits four types of Dengue virus. In general, the disease is extremely debilitating, resulting in high fever, severe headache, joint pain and lethargy. Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) is a particularly serious form of the disease that can result when a patient has been infected with one type of Dengue virus then subsequently becomes infected with another type. It is therefore imperative that any Dengue vaccine protect against all four types of dengue (Types 1,2,3,4). Previous attempts at creating a cross-protective vaccine have been largely unsuccessful because the antigens from one type will tend to dominate, or "mask" the others, producing an incomplete immune response across the four types.

62. Pravda.RU Brazil: Thousands Ill With Dengue In Rio
The outbreak of dengue fever in Rio de Janeiro has reached epidemic proportions,with thousands of cases reported to the medical authorities.
http://english.pravda.ru/main/2002/01/30/26085.html
Jan, 30 2002 Forum in English Former USSR Main World ... About Pravda.RU:Main:More in detail
BRAZIL: THOUSANDS ILL WITH DENGUE IN RIO
The outbreak of Dengue Fever in Rio de Janeiro has reached epidemic proportions, with thousands of cases reported to the medical authorities.
339 new cases of dengue were registered last weekend, bringing to 2,777 the total number of people infected by this disease in January, which is a virus carried by the mosquito. Severe cases can degenerate into haemorrhagic fever, the symptoms of which are similar to Ebola.
So far only one death has been caused by the haemorrhagic form of the disease. Meanwhile, the National Health Foundation is launching a programme to eradicate the disease. Thousands of soldiers are destroying the mosquito larvae with sprays in their breeding areas.
PRAVDA.Ru
BRASILIA BRAZIL
you may discuss the article in our forum

Send it to a friend!

Pravda.RU:Main
TODAY ON FUNREPORTS.COM Giving away Viagra pills and condoms is a good pre-election method in Colombia, A transvestite robbed a gas station, Men and women to use public transport separately in Malaysia. These are the headlines of the funny articles that you can read on PRAVDA.Ru's new project today

63. Pravda.RU Dengue Fever Spreads To Cuba After Leaving 100,000 Victims In Brazil
dengue fever reaches epidemic proportions in Brazil, where cases are registeredfrom north to south of the country and now the first cases appear in Cuba.
http://english.pravda.ru/main/2002/02/19/26469.html
Feb, 19 2002 Forum in English Former USSR Top Stories World ... About Pravda.RU:Top Stories:More in detail
DENGUE FEVER SPREADS TO CUBA AFTER LEAVING 100,000 VICTIMS IN BRAZIL
Dengue fever reaches epidemic proportions in Brazil, where cases are registered from north to south of the country and now the first cases appear in Cuba.
Public health specialists in Brazil estimate that the number of cases in the state of Rio de Janeiro could have reached 100,000, since it is normal for the number of registered cases (25,386) to be far higher in practice, due to the fact that people living far from the cities let the disease run its course as if it were influenza.
The symptoms of Dengue are similar to influenza, with a high fever, headache, aching limbs, listlessness and vomiting. The disease is caused by the mosquito Aedes Aegypti and in cases of multiple infection, the patient can develop the haemorrhagic form of the disease, which is far more serious.
So far 11 people have died from the disease in the state of Rio de Janeiro, but there are 633 cases registered in the far north of the country, thousands of kilometres away in the state of Ceara. There are 17 suspected cases of haemorrhagic dengue in this state and four people have already died.
The Cuban health authorities, which will not count of medical aid from the United States due to the total embargo unilaterally imposed by Washington, an embargo which has resulted in the deaths of thousands of people, have reported thousands of cases and two deaths.

64. Dengue Fever Alert
dengue fever ALERT! Homeopathy Thusfar, there's been 2 cases of DengueFever in Arizona in 1994, in Santa Cruz and Pima County. Last
http://huff.net/ebola/nauman2.htm

65. Dengue Fever, Complementary And Alternative Healing University
dengue fever (DF). dengue fever is an acute infectious disease causedby a virus and transmitted by the Aedes or yellow fever mosquito.
http://alternativehealing.org/dengue_fever.htm
Complementary and Alternative Healing University Search this site powered by FreeFind
Site Map Table of Contents List of Health Problems Chinese Herb Dictionary Qigong Traditional Chinese Medicine ... Viagra Massage/Acupressure Hypnotherapy Tell us what you want var site="SM2kotaradja" Dengue Fever (DF) Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF) These Chinese herb formulae listed are much more effective than the modern Western medical therapy. Edited by: Joe Hing Kwok Chu Dengue fever is an acute infectious disease caused by a virus and transmitted by the Aedes or yellow fever mosquito. It usually occurs in tropical or subtropical climates. Symptoms include headache, fever, and intense joint pain. The symptoms usually last about a week. Fever usually subsides after 2 to 4 days then after 1 to 2 days it rises again, and followed by a generalized rash. The hemorrhagic form of the disease, when serious, can be fatal. The disease spreads rapidly. The mortality is low. There is no specific treatment. Traditional Western therapy includes supportive therapy and centers on management of fluid and electrolyte balance, prevention and treatment of shock, treatment of coagulation disorders and therapy for secondary bacterial infection.

66. NZOOM - Travel - Services And Tools
dengue fever starts to bite. Worse still, the tiny insect could be acarrier of something far more sinister these days dengue fever.
http://travel.nzoom.com/travel_detail/0,1940,147970-136-143,00.html
SEARCH : nz sites nzoom FOR : MORE SEARCH : Select... - Web Search - Ecards - Games - Chat - White Pages - Yellow Pages nz directory web search nzoomail HOME ...
Jobs

TELEVISION TV ONE
TVNZ

SERVICES Travelshop
Competitions

Find Love

nzoomail
...
Ad Info

Dengue fever starts to bite You're lying under a coconut palm on a sun-scorched, white-sand beach in some tropical land when a faint but familiar whine assails your ears One swat of your sunburned chest, and another pesky mosquito meets its doom. A mozzie bite can be just an irritation for a few hours - or it could lead to the hot sweats and debilitations of malaria. Worse still, the tiny insect could be a carrier of something far more sinister these days: dengue fever. Between 50 million and 100 million cases of dengue occur worldwide each year. For malaria you can take tablets ahead of time if you're heading for a tropical country where the disease is a risk. But as yet there's no such medication for dengue. And according to the World Health Organisation (WHO), 2002 has been a bad year for dengue with "a major pandemic like the one in 1998 a distinct possibility".

67. Dengue Fever Virus, IgG And IgM
backhome.gif (1542 bytes) dengue fever Virus, IgG and IgM. Test Highlights.0093096, dengue fever Virus Antibodies, IgG IgM, DENGUE AB.
http://www.aruplab.com/testbltn/denguefever.htm
Dengue Fever Virus, IgG and IgM
The Most Prevalent Vector-Borne Virus in the World For technical information, contact: Nancy Pitstick, B.S., MT(ASCP)
Technical Supervisor, Microbial Immunology I
For scientific and clinical information, contact: Christine Litwin, M.D.
Medical Director, Immunology Laboratory
References: Gubler DJ. Aedes aegypti and Aedes aegypti-borne disease control in the 1990s. Am J Trop Med Hyg 1989; 40:571-578. Henchal EA and Putnak JR. The dengue viruses. Clin Micro Rev 1990; 3:376-396. Halstead SB. Antibody, macrophages, dengue virus infection, shock, and hemorrhage. Rev of Inf Dis 1989; 11:S830-S839. Halstead SB. Immunological parameters of toga virus disease syndromes. In The toga viruses. RW Schlesinger, ed. 1980. New York: Academic Press, Inc., 107-173. Kautner I, et al. Dengue virus infection: epidemiology, pathogenesis, clinical presentation, diagnosis, and prevention. J Pediatr 1997 Oct; 131(4):516-24. Dove A. Dengue fever on the increase. Nature Med 1998 May; 4(5):543. No Authors Listed. Case definitions. Dengue fever. Epidemiol Bull 2000 Jun; 21(2):14-5.

68. DENGUE, THE BONE BREAK FEVER
dengue fever is an acute miasma caused by Group B arbovirus. This type Australia.There are many overlapping strains of dengue fever. The
http://www.simillimum.com/FirstAid/TheFirstResponder/FirstAidin/Dengue-Fever.htm
THE HOMOEOPATHIC FIRST RESPONDER Back to Homoeopathic First Responder THE HOMOEOPATHIC FIRST RESPONDER
DENGUE, THE BONE BREAK FEVER Dengue Fever is an acute miasma caused by Group B arbovirus. This type of diseases has also been called the zymotic disorders in Kent's repertory, which includes dengue, typhoid, yellow fever, etc.. It is found in the tropics and subtropics, especially along coastal areas from North America, South America, West Indies, Mediterranean seaboard, Egypt, Middle East, North, central and South Africa, Greece, Russia, Turks, India, Bangladesh, Pacific islands, Philippines, Thailand, South East Asia, Solomon Islands and Northern Australia. There are many overlapping strains of Dengue fever. The attacks tend to produce immunity to all the strains. In the homologous strain infection provides immunity for around a year and the others of variable amounts of time. The epidemic pattern tends to occur every two or threes years in endemic areas. The pathogenic vector is the female Aedes mesquites, usually Aedes aegypti. SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS The clinical picture various according to the nature of the outbreak or epidemic, the geographical area, and the individual patient. Dengue lasts from 5 to 10 days but there is often a never well since syndrome with sequels. First comes the prodromal malaise with headache shivering. The onset of the symptoms is abrupt with the patient often recalling the exact time. The temperature varies between 103 and 105 F (39.4-40.5 C.) and is accompanied by rigor. The signs and symptoms often begin immediately.

69. Travel Health -- Dengue Fever
Frequently asked questions about dengue fever. dengue fever explainedin ordinary language. dengue fever. What is dengue fever? Dengue
http://www.travelhealth.co.uk/diseases/dengue.htm
Health Advice and Resources for Travellers Home TravelHealth Advice Disease Prevention Travel Shop ... More ...
Dengue Fever
What is Dengue Fever?
Dengue Fever (DF) is a mosquito-borne disease affecting an estimated 50 million people each year. DF occurs in all tropical and some sub-tropical areas of the world, usually in an urban setting. Before 1970 only nine countries had experienced DF, by 1995 this had increased four fold. Today 2,5 billion people worldwide live in areas that are at risk of infection. Humans contract the disease when bitten by an infected female Aedes mosquito. Mosquitoes remain infected all their lives and can in turn pass on infectivity to their eggs. In some parts of the world it has been seen that monkeys are also able to pass on the infection to mosquitoes. Endemic areas increase around the world due to trade (particularly tyre trade where mosquitoes breed in pools of water in tyres). After a bite from an infected Aedes mosquito, the virus circulates in the blood for 2-7 days, causing a feverish illness with headache and muscle pains similar to flu. Sometimes presents with a rash.
Who is at risk of Dengue Fever?

70. WebHealthCentre.com - Health Centre - Dengue Fever
dengue fever is a disease caused by infection with a type of viruscalled Flavivirus. There are four different subtypes of this
http://www.webhealthcentre.com/centers/dengu.asp
Home About Us Feedback Help ...
Health Centre
Choose a topic Acidity Allergy Amoebiasis Arthritis Asthma Autism Breast Cancer Cataract Chicken Pox Cholesterol Dengue Fever Diabetes Epilepsy Heart Disease HIV and AIDS Hypertension Infertility Jaundice Leptospirosis Malaria Measles Migraine Osteoporosis Renal Failure Sinusitis TB Typhoid Viral Fever
Dengue Fever
Introduction

Cause and Pathogenesis

Symptoms and Signs

Investigations and Diagnosis
...
Prevention

Introduction
Dengue fever is a disease caused by infection with a type of virus called Flavivirus . There are four different subtypes of this virus producing varying manifestations of the disease. The disease is spread through the bites of mosquitoes belonging to the Aedes egypti species. The disease is essentially a tropical one and is endemic in large parts of Latin and South America. Of late, its incidence has been on the increase in Asian countries such as India.
Cause and Pathogenesis Dengue fever is transmitted to humans by the bite of the infected Aedes egypti mosquito. The Aedes mosquito breeds in relatively fresh water, lives close to human habitations and bites during the day. The incubation period between the bite and the onset of symptoms is usually two to seven days. The Aedes mosquito is also responsible for the spread of diseases such as yellow fever and Chikungunya virus fever.

71. An Alternative Medicine Network
dengue fever (breakbone fever, dengue hemorrhagic fever). What is denguefever? dengue fever is a mosquitoborne disease caused by a virus.
http://www.herbsmed.com/medlib/11.htm
HerbsMed.com Training
Training Software Consulting Exams Online Online University An Alternative Medicine Network News Herbs Acupuncture Clinics ... Consult specialists Common Illness Amebiasis
Anthrax

Arboviral Infections

Babesiosis
...
DEHYDRATION

Dengue Fever (breakbone fever, dengue hemorrhagic fever) What is dengue fever? Dengue fever is a mosquito-borne disease caused by a virus. The disease is mainly tropical in origin but occasionally residents or visitors from other countries may arrive in this country with dengue fever. Cases originating in the United States are virtually unknown. Who gets dengue fever? Dengue fever may occur in people of all ages who are exposed to infected mosquitoes. The disease occurs mainly in tropical Asia and the Caribbean, usually during the rainy seasons in areas with high numbers of infected mosquitoes. How is dengue fever spread? Dengue fever is spread by the bite of infected Aedes mosquitoes. What are the symptoms of dengue fever? Fever
Headache
Joing and Muscle Pain
Rash
Loss of Appetite Vomiting Abdominal Pain Shock Circulatory Failure How soon do symptoms occur? Dengue fever may occur from three to 15 days after exposure to an infected mosquito, commonly within five to six days.

72. Scoop: Travellers To South Pacific Warned Of Dengue Fever
New Zealand travellers to the South Pacific are being reminded to avoid being bittenby mosquitos after continued reports of a dengue fever in some countries
http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/PO0302/S00089.htm
News Features My Scoop About Scoop ... General Travellers to South Pacific warned of dengue fever
Thursday, 13 February 2003, 2:33 pm
Press Release: Ministry of Health

Travellers to South Pacific warned of dengue fever New Zealand travellers to the South Pacific are being reminded to avoid being bitten by mosquitos after continued reports of a dengue fever in some countries there, The Ministry of Health said today. "We're reminding people to take some common-sense precautions following the reports from several countries including Fiji and New Caledonia," said Dr Doug Lush, Senior Advisor Communicable Diseases. "Local authorities in the affected countries are undertaking control programmes to limit the spread of disease. However there are also steps that visitors and tourists can take." "The Ministry recommends choosing to stay in lodgings where there are screens on windows and doors, using insect sprays when indoors, and wearing repellent and protective clothing when outdoors," said Dr Lush. Dengue fever is a serious viral disease spread by the bite of infected mosquitos. It is found in tropical regions worldwide, including the Pacific Islands. Dengue fever is not transmitted in New Zealand because this country does not have the types of mosquitoes that carry dengue fever, and since the virus is not transmitted from person to person, New Zealanders are only at risk when they travel to countries where dengue is a problem.

73. Dengue Fever
Health. dengue fever in ET. Medical experts said the spread of dengue fever is dueto poor health services, medicine shortage and unsanitary living conditions.
http://www.etra.zip.com.au/hedf.html
Welcome Map Site ETRA Transitional Government ... Tuberculosis Dengue fever Trauma Language Economy Education ... Email Last Update: 03/06/99 Health Dengue Fever in ET Dengue Epidemic Adds to Economic Burden: Indonesia (and East Timor, ed.) Public Health Armed with long-barreled sprays, Indonesian health officers are scouring neighborhoods and checking on house drains, with the aim of destroying potential bases for the small, deadly mosquitoes that cause dengue fever. These armies of health officers are part of a national campaign to combat a rash of dengue hemorrhagic fever, which comes as Indonesia is hard-pressed to deal with its worst-ever economic calamity. Already, the economic crisis has led to supply problems with basic medicines and health services, whose prices have also gone up since late in 1997. The dengue epidemic, caused by the small, black mosquito with white spots called Aedes aegypti, has so far swept through 12 of the country's 27 provinces since February 1998. Some 430 people have died, and more than 20,000 people have been hospitalized, a health ministry official said. The number of affected people is rising by 200 a day. The provinces most affected are Greater Jakarta, South Sumatra, South Sulawesi, North Sulawesi, Jambi, Lampung, Southeast Sulawesi, Central Sulawesi, Maluku and East Timor.

74. World66.com: Don't Travel By The Book
Health dengue fever. dengue fever is a mosquitotransmitted viral diseaseoccurring chiefly in tropical and subtropical areas of the world.
http://www.world66.com/TravelWise.asp?ID=21

75. Dengue Fever
By topic Infections/Infectious Diseases Travel Medicine. By keywords denguefever. Receive HealthLink via email! dengue fever. What is dengue fever?
http://oci.mcw.edu/article/954993538.html
Search:
search tips
Email this article
Print this article

Find related articles: By topic:
Infections/Infectious Diseases

Travel Medicine
By keywords:
dengue fever

Receive Health Link via email!
Subscribe now >>
Dengue Fever
What is dengue fever?
Dengue fever is a disease caused by a virus spread by the bite of an infected mosquito, uncommon in Wisconsin. The disease is common in most tropical and subtropical areas (including some islands in the Caribbean, Mexico, most countries of South and Central America, the Pacific, Asia and parts of tropical Africa). Cases originating in the United States are virtually unknown, but occasionally residents from or visitors to countries where dengue fever occurs may arrive in this country and develop dengue fever. Who gets dengue fever? Dengue fever may occur in people of all ages. Children usually have a milder disease than adults. How is dengue fever spread? Dengue fever is spread by the bite of infected Aedes mosquitoes. It cannot be spread from one person to another. What are the symptoms of dengue fever and dengue hemmorhagic fever?

76. Graeme | D: Dengue Fever
dengue fever a disease caused by a parasite, d dengue fever is aa disease causedby a parasite. next dental amalgam · ». d, demons. dengue fever. dental amalgam.
http://seercom.com/bluto/glossary/d/dengue.html
@import url(http://www.seercom.com/main.css);
about
skepticism science glossary ... writing
zones critical thinking smallpox eggsperiment nina ... email dengue fever
a disease caused by a parasite
next:
d
paul henri thiry d'holbach debunking demons ... deja vu
dengue fever

77. Heart To Heart Talk
Fatal dengue fever. What is dengue fever? dengue fever, which has ThrombocytopenicPurpura. When was the first case of dengue fever reported? In 1956
http://www.cdc-cdh.edu/hospital/cardio/art48.html
Fatal Dengue Fever
A Killer called Cigarettes
Abortion Risk Acupuncture: A sticky issue Ageing and Cholesterol ... Nicotine Addiction and Cigarette s Nicotine Addiction and Cigarettes NONI: Miracle or Mirage? Obesity Pill Omega 3: "Fish Oils" ... Zyban: Aid to Smoking Cessation
What is Dengue Fever? Dengue Fever, which has already started to afflict a few children in Cebu, is a severe, potentially fatal, hemorrhagic febrile disease caused by dengue viruses, of which there are types 1 to 4. It is also known as Philippine, Thai or Singapore Hemorrhagic Fever or Acute Infectious Thrombocytopenic Purpura. When was the first case of Dengue Fever reported? In 1956, Hammon established the relation of dengue infection to Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever, but report of this condition in Australian children was made as early as 1897. In 1981, Cuba had a large outbreak of this disease affecting more than 100,000 children and adults (with shock syndrome), 158 of whom died. In the Philippines, the present outbreak of dengue nationwide has been reported to have reached 13,024, with 236 fatalities, as of September 14, 1998. How does one catch this disease?

78. USAID Press Release: Dengue Fever Outbreak In El Salvador
dengue fever Outbreak in El Salvador USAID will help the people of El Salvadorfight the outbreak of dengue fever, said Administrator J. Brady Anderson.
http://www.usaid.gov/press/releases/2000/pr000915.html
Skip redundant navigation Home This Is USAID Privacy ... Contact The United States Agency for International Development This is an archived USAID document retained on this web site as a matter of public record.
Dengue Fever Outbreak in El Salvador:
USAID Provides Initial $25,000 For Medical Supplies
U.S. AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
PRESS RELEASE WASHINGTON, DC 20523
PRESS OFFICE
http://www.usaid.gov

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, September 15, 2000 Contact: Joseph Schultz Washington, D.C. - U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator J. Brady Anderson today announced the Agency would contribute $25,000 to assist victims of the dengue fever and dengue hemorragic fever (DHF) epidemic in El Salvador. "USAID will help the people of El Salvador fight the outbreak of dengue fever," said Administrator J. Brady Anderson. "We will continue to monitor the spread of the epidemic and we're poised to lend further assistance if the epidemic worsens." USAID's contribution will enable El Salvador's National Emergency Committee (COEN) to purchase medical equipment and supplies for the early diagnosis, monitoring and therapy of dengue hemorragic fever victims. Medical equipment will include such items as pediatric vital sign monitors, pediatric sphingomanometers, and disposable oxygen sensors for pediatric and neonatal patients. El Salvador's President, Francisco Flores declared a national emergency on September 12 due to the continued increase in loss of life as a result of the dengue epidemic. From January to September 2000, El Salvador has seen a dramatic increase in the number of cases of dengue and dengue hemorragic fever (DHF). There have been 211 reported and confirmed cases of DHF since January.

79. Health Ency.: Disease: Dengue Fever
dengue fever See images. dengue fever is being seen more in world travelers.It is generally selflimited and although uncomfortable is not fatal.
http://www.austin360.com/shared/health/adam/ency/article/001374.html
SEARCH: The Web
Yellow Pages
HOME

Illustrated Health Encyclopedia

Important notice
Ency. home Disease D Dengue fever See images Overview Symptoms Treatment ... Prevention Alternative names: West Nile fever; O'nyong-nyong fever; Dengue-like disease; Breakbone fever Definition: A mild viral illness transmitted by mosquitoes and characterized by fever rash , and muscle and joint pains . See also Dengue hemorrhagic fever Causes and Risks Dengue fever is caused by several related viruses (four different arboviruses) and is transmitted by the bite of mosquitoes, most commonly Aedes aegypti, found in tropic and subtropic regions. Dengue fever presents with sudden onset of a high fever , often to 104 to 105 degrees Fahrenheit, headache , and slightly later the appearance of severe joint and muscle pains . A flat (macular) red blanchable rash may appear over most of the body early during the fever. A second rash, measles-like in appearance, appears later in the disease. Infected people may have increased skin sensitivity and are very uncomfortable. Dengue fever is being seen more in world travelers. It is generally self-limited and although uncomfortable is not fatal. Diagnosis may depend on a traveler telling his or her health care worker of any visits to areas of the world where dengue fever is

80. Dengue Fever And Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever - Boston College
WHAT ARE dengue fever AND DENGUE HEMORRAGHIC FEVER? Dengue HOW DO PEOPLECONTRACT dengue fever AND DENGUE HEMORRAGHIC FEVER? Humans
http://www.bc.edu/schools/cas/biology/research/insect/dengue/
@import "/meta-elements/css/standards.css"; BCInfo A to Z SEARCH DIRECTORIES ... insect initiative dengue Search Biology BC Sites
BIOLOGY HOME
ABOUT BIOLOGY FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION LISTING RESEARCH ... Malaria Dengue Fever Leishmaniasis African Sleeping Sickness West Nile Virus GRADUATE STUDIES ... Contact Biology Dengue Fever and Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever
INITIATIVE FOR VECTOR AND INSECT SCIENCE WHAT ARE DENGUE FEVER AND DENGUE HEMORRAGHIC FEVER? Dengue fever is a febrile illness caused by an RNA flavivirus that is spread by the bites of mosquitoes. The symptoms of dengue include fever, headache, rash, severe pains in the muscles and joints, and pain behind the eyes. The severe muscle pains have led some to call the disease "break bone fever". Whereas dengue fever is rarely fatal, dengue hemorraghic fever is a severe disease that leads to death in approximately 5% of cases. Individuals with dengue hemorraghic fever suffer an increase in vascular permeability, causing them to lose plasma; if untreated, this loss of plasma can lead to a dangerous drop in fluid volume (known as dengue shock syndrome ) and death. Dengue hemorraghic fever is seen most often in children younger than 15 years old. It is also seen most often in individuals who were previously infected with simple dengue fever.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 103    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter