نتایج جستجو برای: babesiosis

تعداد نتایج: 1105  

Journal: :Infectious Disease Clinics of North America 2015

2007
Sarah E. Rodgers Thomas N. Mather

Distribution of nymphal Ixodes scapularis in Rhode Island was used as a logistical regressor for predicting presence of human babesiosis. Although the incidence of babesiosis is increasing in southern Rhode Island, large areas of the state are free of babesiosis risk.

Journal: :Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America 2009
Diane M Gubernot Charles T Lucey Karen C Lee Gilliam B Conley Leslie G Holness Robert P Wise

BACKGROUND Human babesiosis is an illness with clinical manifestations that range from asymptomatic to fatal. Although babesiosis is not nationally notifiable, the US incidence appears to be increasing. Babesia infection is a transfusion-transmissable disease. An estimated 70 cases were reported during 1979-2007; most of these cases were reported during the past decade. METHODS We queried the...

2004
Barbara L. Herwaldt Guy de Bruyn Norman J. Pieniazek Mary Homer Kathryn H. Lofy Susan B. Slemenda Thomas R. Fritsche David H. Persing Ajit P. Limaye

Most reported U.S. zoonotic cases of babesiosis have occurred in the Northeast and been caused by Babesia microti. In Washington State, three cases of babesiosis have been reported previously, which were caused by WA1 (for "Washington 1")-type parasites. We investigated a case of babesiosis in Washington in an 82-year-old man whose spleen had been removed and whose parasitemia level was 41.4%. ...

2017
Martina Crnogaj José Joaquin Cerón Iva Šmit Ivana Kiš Jelena Gotić Mirna Brkljačić Vesna Matijatko Camila Peres Rubio Nada Kučer Vladimir Mrljak

BACKGROUND Canine babesiosis is caused by species of the Babesia genus and has become an emerging disease worldwide. To the authors' knowledge there are no reports in which antioxidants have been analyzed in different presentations of canine babesiosis or in which the prognostic value of antioxidants has been studied. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether oxidative stress could be relat...

Journal: :Veterinary parasitology 2012
P Defauw J P Schoeman P Smets A Goddard E Meyer C Liebenberg S Daminet

Renal damage is deemed a common, yet poorly documented, complication in canine babesiosis. Serum urea and creatinine are insensitive and non-specific markers of early renal dysfunction and their measurements are influenced by hemolysis caused by babesiosis. Therefore, the aim of this study was to use urinary markers to assess the localization and degree of renal dysfunction in dogs with Babesia...

2013
Lénaïg Halos Isabelle Lebert Isabelle Chao Gwenaël Vourc’h Christian Ducrot David Abrial Jean-François Ravier Jacques Guillot

BACKGROUND The causative agent of canine babesiosis is the protozoan Babesia canis, transmitted by the tick Dermacentor reticulatus within France. While the parasite can be found everywhere in France however cases of infection are associated with distinct geographical foci. The aim of the study was to evaluate the clinical occurrence of canine babesiosis diagnosed in veterinary clinics in order...

2017
Josipa Kuleš Jelena Gotić Vladimir Mrljak Renata Barić Rafaj

BACKGROUND Canine babesiosis is a tick-borne disease caused by hemoprotozoan parasites of the genus Babesia. The disease can be clinically classified into uncomplicated and complicated forms. The aim of this study was to assess the level of endothelial activation and alterations in the fibrinolytic pathway during canine babesiosis. RESULTS Blood samples were collected on the day of admission ...

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 2015
F Beugnet Y Moreau

Babesiosis is the disease caused by infection of the erythrocytes of mammals by Babesia species, which are Apicomplexa protozoa belonging to the suborder Piroplasmidea and the family Babesiidae. They are different from the Theileriidae, which can also infect white blood cells and endothelial cells. Babesiosis is one of the most important tick-borne infectious diseases of domestic and wild mamma...

Journal: :Clinical microbiology reviews 2000
Edouard G Vannier Maria A Diuk-Wasser Choukri Ben Mamoun Peter J Krause

Babesiosis is caused by intraerythrocytic protozoan parasites that are transmitted by ticks, or less commonly through blood transfusion or transplacentally. Human babesiosis was first recognized in a splenectomized patient in Europe but most cases have been reported from the northeastern and upper midwestern United States in people with an intact spleen and no history of immune impairment. Case...

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