نتایج جستجو برای: zoonotic diseases

تعداد نتایج: 857018  

Journal: :Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences 2009
Mark W Robinson John P Dalton

Zoonotic infections are among the most common on earth and are responsible for >60 per cent of all human infectious diseases. Some of the most important and well-known human zoonoses are caused by worm or helminth parasites, including species of nematodes (trichinellosis), cestodes (cysticercosis, echinococcosis) and trematodes (schistosomiasis). However, along with social, epidemiological and ...

2016
Alireza Zahedi Andrea Paparini Fuchun Jian Ian Robertson Una Ryan

Cryptosporidium is an enteric parasite that is transmitted via the faecal-oral route, water and food. Humans, wildlife and domestic livestock all potentially contribute Cryptosporidium to surface waters. Human encroachment into natural ecosystems has led to an increase in interactions between humans, domestic animals and wildlife populations. Increasing numbers of zoonotic diseases and spill ov...

صباغیان, حسین,

Zoonoses are disease and/or infection naturally transmissible between vertebrate animals and humans. Emerging zoonoses are defined by the WHO/FAO/OIE joint consultation on emerging zoonotic disease held in Geneva, 3-5 may 2004 as "diseases which are newly recognized or newly evolved or that have occurred previously but show an increase in incidence or expansion in geographical, host or vector r...

Journal: :Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 2009
Kelly L Warfield Emily M Deal Sina Bavari

JAVMA, Vol 234, No. 9, May 1, 2009 M emerging and reemerging human pathogens are derived from animals or from animal tissues, waste, or products. A wide range of species including insects (eg, mosquitos), wild animals (eg, rodents, bats, and monkeys), draft animals (eg, horses and mules), and livestock animals (eg, swine, poultry, and cattle) have been implicated in transmission of various high...

Journal: :Lancet 2012
William B Karesh Andy Dobson James O Lloyd-Smith Juan Lubroth Matthew A Dixon Malcolm Bennett Stephen Aldrich Todd Harrington Pierre Formenty Elizabeth H Loh Catherine C Machalaba Mathew Jason Thomas David L Heymann

More than 60% of human infectious diseases are caused by pathogens shared with wild or domestic animals. Zoonotic disease organisms include those that are endemic in human populations or enzootic in animal populations with frequent cross-species transmission to people. Some of these diseases have only emerged recently. Together, these organisms are responsible for a substantial burden of diseas...

2011
Sandip Roy Terry F. McElwain Yan Wan

BACKGROUND Developing control policies for zoonotic diseases is challenging, both because of the complex spread dynamics exhibited by these diseases, and because of the need for implementing complex multi-species surveillance and control efforts using limited resources. Mathematical models, and in particular network models, of disease spread are promising as tools for control-policy design, bec...

Journal: :The Southeast Asian journal of tropical medicine and public health 2003
Akira Ito Hiroshi Yamasaki Minoru Nakao Yasuhito Sako Kazuhiro Nakaya Wulamu Mamuti Ning Xiao Marcello O Sato Yuji Ishikawa

The recent emergence of zoonotic parasitic diseases of public health importance represents a growing global concern. Among zoonotic helminthic diseases, both echinococcosis and cysticercosis are the most serious diseases threatening human life. Neurocysticercosis (NCC) caused by ingestion of eggs of the pork tapeworm, Taenia solium, is spreading worldwide and not rare even in Muslim or Jewish c...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2009
Gerardo Suzán Erika Marcé J. Tomasz Giermakowski James N. Mills Gerardo Ceballos Richard S. Ostfeld Blas Armién Juan M. Pascale Terry L. Yates

Emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases have become a major global environmental problem with important public health, economic, and political consequences. The etiologic agents of most emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic, and anthropogenic environmental changes that affect wildlife communities are increasingly implicated in disease emergence and spread. Although increased disease in...

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