نتایج جستجو برای: plague

تعداد نتایج: 13533  

2012
Voahangy Andrianaivoarimanana Sandra Telfer Minoarisoa Rajerison Michel A. Ranjalahy Fehivola Andriamiarimanana Corinne Rahaingosoamamitiana Lila Rahalison Ronan Jambou

BACKGROUND Plague is endemic within the central highlands of Madagascar, where its main reservoir is the black rat, Rattus rattus. Typically this species is considered susceptible to plague, rapidly dying after infection inducing the spread of infected fleas and, therefore, dissemination of the disease to humans. However, persistence of transmission foci in the same area from year to year, supp...

Journal: :Annual review of entomology 2005
Kenneth L Gage Michael Y Kosoy

For more than a century, scientists have investigated the natural history of plague, a highly fatal disease caused by infection with the gram-negative bacterium Yersinia pestis. Among their most important discoveries were the zoonotic nature of the disease and that plague exists in natural cycles involving transmission between rodent hosts and flea vectors. Other significant findings include th...

Journal: :The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene 2010
Tamara Ben Ari Alexander Gershunov Rouyer Tristan Bernard Cazelles Kenneth Gage Nils C Stenseth

Plague is a vector-borne, highly virulent zoonotic disease caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis. It persists in nature through transmission between its hosts (wild rodents) and vectors (fleas). During epizootics, the disease expands and spills over to other host species such as humans living in or close to affected areas. Here, we investigate the effect of large-scale climate variability on ...

Journal: :Archives of Iranian medicine 2010
Mohammad Hossein Azizi Farzaneh Azizi

In the history of medicine, the human plague has been considered as one of the most terrifying fatal diseases that over centuries, killed millions of people. Three major pandemics took place between the 6th and 19th centuries, which profoundly impacted the world's socioeconomic status; however, the etiologic agent of the plague remained unknown up to the end of the 19th century. During the past...

2013
Nicolas Cabanel Alexandre Leclercq Viviane Chenal-Francisque Badereddin Annajar Minoarisoa Rajerison Souad Bekkhoucha Eric Bertherat Elisabeth Carniel

After 25 years of no cases of plague, this disease recurred near Tobruk, Libya, in 2009. An epidemiologic investigation identified 5 confirmed cases. We determined ribotypes, Not1 restriction profiles, and IS100 and IS1541 hybridization patterns of strains isolated during this outbreak. We also analyzed strains isolated during the 2003 plague epidemic in Algeria to determine whether there were ...

2016

Accepting the rat spread and rat flea theory of the epidemiology of plague, the important question is how to get rid of rats?rats once got rid of, we may neglect the fleas. The flea is a parasite and cannot exist for long without its host, but even if it could survive and take on another host, without plague infection of that host, the flea would be harmless. Col. Buchanan deserves the very gre...

Journal: :The Journal of animal ecology 2009
Paul Stapp Daniel J Salkeld Heather A Franklin John P Kraft Daniel W Tripp Michael F Antolin Kenneth L Gage

1. The introduction of plague to North America is a significant threat to colonies of prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus), a species of conservation concern in the Great Plains. Other small rodents are exposed to the causative agent, Yersinia pestis, during or after epizootics; yet, its effect on these rodents is not known, and their role in transmitting and maintaining plague in the absence of...

2012
Yujiang Zhang Xiang Dai Xinhui Wang Abulimiti Maituohuti Yujun Cui Azhati Rehemu Qiguo Wang Weiwei Meng Tao Luo Rong Guo Bing Li Abulikemu Abudurexiti Yajun Song Ruifu Yang Hanli Cao

BACKGROUND Rhombomys opimus (great gerbil) is a reservoir of Yersinia pestis in the natural plague foci of Central Asia. Great gerbils are highly resistant to Y. pestis infection. The coevolution of great gerbils and Y. pestis is believed to play an important role in the plague epidemics in Central Asia plague foci. However, the dynamics of Y. pestis infection and the corresponding antibody res...

2012
Anne Derbise Alba Cerdà Marín Patrick Ave Thierry Blisnick Michel Huerre Elisabeth Carniel Christian E. Demeure

BACKGROUND Plague is still a public health problem in the world and is re-emerging, but no efficient vaccine is available. We previously reported that oral inoculation of a live attenuated Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, the recent ancestor of Yersinia pestis, provided protection against bubonic plague. However, the strain poorly protected against pneumonic plague, the most deadly and contagious f...

2012
Henry S. Gibbons Michael D. Krepps Gary Ouellette Mark Karavis Lisa Onischuk Pascale Leonard Stacey Broomall Todd Sickler Janet L. Betters Paul McGregor Greg Donarum Alvin Liem Ed Fochler Lauren McNew C. Nicole Rosenzweig Evan Skowronski

Plague disease caused by the gram-negative bacterium Yersinia pestis routinely affects animals and occasionally humans, in the western United States. The strains native to the North American continent are thought to be derived from a single introduction in the late 19(th) century. The degree to which these isolates have diverged genetically since their introduction is not clear, and new genomic...

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