نتایج جستجو برای: borne disease

تعداد نتایج: 1512561  

Journal: :Journal of theoretical biology 2009
C Cosner J C Beier R S Cantrell D Impoinvil L Kapitanski M D Potts A Troyo S Ruan

With the recent resurgence of vector-borne diseases due to urbanization and development there is an urgent need to understand the dynamics of vector-borne diseases in rapidly changing urban environments. For example, many empirical studies have produced the disturbing finding that diseases continue to persist in modern city centers with zero or low rates of transmission. We develop spatial mode...

Journal: :The Journal of general virology 2014
C L Jeffries K L Mansfield L P Phipps P R Wakeley R Mearns A Schock S Bell A C Breed A R Fooks N Johnson

In Europe and Asia, Ixodid ticks transmit tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV), a flavivirus that causes severe encephalitis in humans but appears to show no virulence for livestock and wildlife. In the British Isles, where TBEV is absent, a closely related tick-borne flavivirus, named louping ill virus (LIV), is present. However, unlike TBEV, LIV causes a febrile illness in sheep, cattle, grou...

Journal: :The Southeast Asian journal of tropical medicine and public health 1991
B B Bhatia

Food-borne parasitic zoonoses have a major impact on the health and economy in developing countries in the tropics and sub-tropics. Complex socio-economic and socio-cultural factors impact on the maintenance of parasitic zoonoses. In addition to human disease, some of these parasites are responsible for economic loss to livestock production. Throughout India, problems of food-borne parasitic zo...

Journal: :The Medical journal of Australia 2015
Cameron E Webb

Mosquito-borne pathogens remain a threat to public health in Australia. The activity of dengue and chikungunya viruses has increased across South-East Asia and the Pacific region in recent years, and the number of travellers returning to Australia infected with mosquito-borne pathogens has steadily grown.1 Annual notifications of endemic mosquito-borne disease resulting from infection with Ross...

2017
Simon Pollett Benjamin M. Althouse Brett Forshey George W. Rutherford Richard G. Jarman

Internet-based surveillance methods for vector-borne diseases (VBDs) using "big data" sources such as Google, Twitter, and internet newswire scraping have recently been developed, yet reviews on such "digital disease detection" methods have focused on respiratory pathogens, particularly in high-income regions. Here, we present a narrative review of the literature that has examined the performan...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2007
Jeffrey Shaman Jonathan F. Day

The frequency of moderate to heavy rainfall events is projected to change in response to global warming. Here we show that these hydrologic changes may have a profound effect on mosquito population dynamics and rates of mosquito-borne disease transmission. We develop a simple model, which treats the mosquito reproductive cycle as a phase oscillator that responds to rainfall frequency forcing. T...

2016
Luis E. Escobar Daniel Romero-Alvarez Renato Leon Manuel A. Lepe-Lopez Meggan E. Craft Mercy J. Borbor-Cordova Jens-Christian Svenning

More than half of the world population is at risk of vector-borne diseases including dengue fever, chikungunya, zika, yellow fever, leishmaniasis, chagas disease, and malaria, with highest incidences in tropical regions. In Ecuador, vector-borne diseases are present from coastal and Amazonian regions to the Andes Mountains; however, a detailed characterization of the distribution of their vecto...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2003
Qiyi Wen Kazuaki Miyamoto Bruce A McClane

About 5% of Clostridium perfringens type A isolates carry the cpe gene encoding the C. perfringens enterotoxin. Those cpe-positive type A isolates are important causes of food-poisoning and non-food-borne cases of diarrheas in humans, as well as certain veterinary cases of diarrhea. Previous studies have determined that the enterotoxigenic type A isolates causing both non-food-borne human gastr...

Journal: :The Journal of general virology 1994
K Venugopal T Gritsun V A Lashkevich E A Gould

Kyasanur Forest disease (KFD) virus is a highly pathogenic member of the family Flaviviridae producing a haemorrhagic disease in infected human beings. Despite this high pathogenicity and potential epidemiological importance, there have been relatively few detailed antigenic or molecular studies on KFD virus. The nucleotide sequences of the genes encoding the structural proteins of the virus ha...

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