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         Dengue:     more books (100)
  1. Dengue Viruses (Virology Monographs) by R. W. Schlesinger, S. Hotta, et all 1977-10
  2. A history of yellow fever: indisputable facts pertaining to its origin and cause ..., with an addendum on its twin sister Dengue, containing a parallel ... the most prominent symptoms of each disease by W L. 1833-1904 Coleman, 2010-09-04
  3. 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
  4. Larvicidal and repellent potential of Albizzia amara Boivin and Ocimum basilicum Linn against dengue vector, Aedes aegypti (Insecta:Diptera:Culicidae) [An article from: Bioresource Technology] by K. Murugan, P. Murugan, et all 2007-01-01
  5. Dengue Virus (Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology)
  6. Dengue Guidelines for Diagnosis, Treatment, Prevention and Control by World Health Organization, 2010-03
  7. HAWAII BIOTECH BEGINS PHASE 1 CLINICAL TRIAL FOR DENGUE VACCINE.: An article from: Biotech Business by Unavailable, 2009-10-01
  8. Dengue Fever and Other Hemorrhagic Viruses (Deadly Diseases and Epidemics) by Tritha, Ph.D. Chakraborty, 2008-02-28
  9. Dengue: Webster's Timeline History, 1839 - 2007 by Icon Group International, 2009-07-11
  10. Dengue risk among visitors to Hawaii during an outbreak.(RESEARCH): An article from: Emerging Infectious Diseases by Carrie E. Smith, Tammy Tom, et all 2005-05-01
  11. Persistent emergence of dengue.(COMMENTARY): An article from: Emerging Infectious Diseases by Charles H. Calisher, 2005-05-01
  12. 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
  13. Guidelines for Dengue Surveillance and Mosquito Control, Second Edition (WHO Pacific Regional Office Education in Action Series) by World Health Organization, 2003-11
  14. Dengue: piequete que mata: infección que transmite un mosquito. (Socied@d!).(contagio en México; campañas de prevención)(TT: Dengue fever: deadly stings ... campaigns): An article from: Siempre! by Gabriel Jiménez, 2002-08-28

21. Dengue Fever: Symptoms - MayoClinic.com
dengue fever — Comprehensive overview covers treatment, symptoms and risk factors of this mosquitoborne illness.
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/dengue-fever/DS01028/DSECTION=symptoms

22. DENGUE FEVER
Brief discription of dengue Fever, what it is, how do you get it, is there a cure?
http://sped2work.tripod.com/dengue.html
Build your own FREE website at Tripod.com Share: Facebook Twitter Digg reddit document.write(lycos_ad['leaderboard']); document.write(lycos_ad['leaderboard2']);
DENGUE FEVER
  • Dengue occurs in most tropical areas of the world. Most U.S. cases occur in travelers returning from abroad, but the Dengue risk is increasing for persons living along the Texas-Mexico border and in other parts of the southern United States. There is no specific treatment for Dengue. Prevention centers on avoiding mosquito bites in areas where Dengue occurs or might occur and eliminating breeding sites.

What is Dengue fever? What is Dengue hemorrhagic fever? Dengue fever is a flu-like illness spread by the bite of an infected mosquito. Dengue hemorrhagic fever is a severe, often fatal, complication of Dengue fever. What is the infectious agent that causes Dengue? Dengue and Dengue hemorrhagic fever are caused by any of the Dengue family of viruses. Infection with one virus does not protect a person against infection with another. How is Dengue spread?

23. Dengue Fever
Provides a description of the virus and information on how it is spread, the causes and symptoms.
http://www.infobrok.co.nz/dengue_fever.html
Home Contact Site Map .: Menu Yellow Fever Outbreak Yellow Fever Vaccine Fever In The Returned Traveler Dengue Fever ... Yellow Fever Hits Dengue fever Definition Dengue fever is a disease caused by one of a number of viruses that are carried by mosquitoes. These mosquitoes then transmit the virus to humans.
Description The virus that causes dengue fever is called an arbovirus, which stands for arthropod-borne virus. Mosquitoes are a type of arthropod. In a number of regions, mosquitoes carry this virus and are responsible for passing it along to humans. These regions include the Middle East, the far East, Africa, and the Caribbean Islands. In these locations, the dengue fever arbovirus is endemic, meaning that the virus naturally and consistently lives in that location. The disease only shows up in the United States sporadically. In order to understand how dengue fever is transmitted, several terms need to be defined. The word "host" means an animal (including a human) that can be infected with a particular disease. The word "vector" means an organism that can carry a particular disease-causing agent (like a virus or bacteria) without actually developing the disease. The vector can then pass the virus or bacteria on to a new host. Many of the common illnesses in the United States (including the common cold, many viral causes of diarrhea, and influenza or "flu") are spread because the viruses that cause these illness can be passed directly from person to person. However, dengue fever cannot be passed directly from one infected person to another. Instead, the virus responsible for dengue fever requires an intermediate vector, a mosquito, which carries the virus from one host to another. The mosquito that carries the arbovirus responsible for dengue fever is the same type of mosquito that can transmit other diseases, including yellow fever. This mosquito is called Aedes egypti. The most common victims are children younger than 10 years of age.

24. Dengue Fever - The Dengue Mosquito
The page describes the dengue mosquito, how it lives and breeds and how it transmits the disease. The site provides upto-date information and advice on how to reduce the risk
http://www.health.qld.gov.au/dengue/dengue_fever/mosquito.asp
Home Site map Contact us Help Search Search this site:
Dengue Fever

25. Dengue Fever Facts
dengue fever is a flulike illness spread by the bite of an infected mosquito. dengue hemorrhagic fever is a severe, often fatal, complication of dengue fever.
http://www.dhpe.org/infect/dengue.html
Dengue
  • Dengue occurs in most tropical areas of the world. Most U.S. cases occur in travelers returning from abroad, but the dengue risk is increasing for persons living along the Texas-Mexico border and in other parts of the southern United States. There is no specific treatment for dengue. Prevention centers on avoiding mosquito bites in areas where dengue occurs or might occur and eliminating breeding sites.
What is dengue fever? What is dengue hemorrhagic fever? Dengue fever is a flu-like illness spread by the bite of an infected mosquito. Dengue hemorrhagic fever is a severe, often fatal, complication of dengue fever. What is the infectious agent that causes dengue? Dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever are caused by any of the dengue family of viruses. Infection with one virus does not protect a person against infection with another. How is dengue spread? Dengue is spread by the bite of an Aedes mosquito. The mosquito transmits the disease by biting an infected person and then biting someone else. Where is dengue found?

26. Dengue
Provides information on the research being undertaken into this disease and its vectors.
http://apps.who.int/tdr/svc/diseases/dengue

27. Dengue
Under optimal conditions, the egg of an Aedes mosquito can hatch into a larva in less than a day. The larva then takes about four days to develop in a pupa, from which an adult
http://www.dengue.gov.sg/subject.asp?id=12

28. CDC - Frequently Asked Questions - Dengue
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Your Online Source for Credible Health Information
http://www.cdc.gov/dengue/fAQFacts/index.html

29. TropIKA: Dengue
Information on this disease, review articles, news items, editorial opinions, research articles and reports.
http://www.tropika.net/svc/home/dengue
@import url(/styles/t.css); TropIKA.net Tropical Diseases Research to Foster

30. Fighting Disease: Disease List--DENGUE
dengue Tables and Charts Countries and Territories in which dengue or dengue Haemorrhagic Fever is Known to Occur. AGENT A flavivirus with 4 distinct subgroups.
http://www.un.org/cyberschoolbus/special/health/disease/dengue.htm
DENGUE
Tables and Charts:
AGENT
A flavivirus with 4 distinct subgroups.
VECTOR
DESCRIPTION
Dengue is a mosquito-borne infection which in recent years has become a major international public health concern. A more lethal complication, dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF), was first recognized during the 1950s and is today a leading cause of childhood deaths in many countries.
TRANSMISSION
Dengue viruses are transmitted to humans through the bite of infected Aedes mosquitos. Once infected, a mosquito remains infective for life, transmitting the virus to susceptible individuals during probing and blood feeding. Infective female mosquitos may also transmit the virus to the next generation of mosquitos by transovarial transmission. Humans are the main amplifying host of the virus, although studies have shown that in some parts of the world monkeys may become infected and perhaps serve as a source of virus for uninfected mosquitos.
The spread of dengue is attributed to expanding geographic distribution of the four dengue viruses and of their mosquito vectors, the most important of which is Aedes aegypti. A rapid rise in urban populations is bringing ever greater numbers of people into contact with the vector mosquito, while poor sanitation in many urban centers and lack of adequate resources for water storage and waste disposal provides more opportunities for mosquito breeding.

31. Dengue - Wikipédia
L encyclop die libre pr sente l histoire de la maladie, son pid miologie, ses sympt mes, son diagnostic et son traitement.
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dengue
Dengue
Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Aller à : Navigation rechercher homophone , voir dingue Dengue
Classification et ressources externes Le moustique Aedes aegypti transmet le virus de la dengue à l'être humain lors de la piqure. CIM CIM DiseasesDB MedlinePlus ... MeSH La dengue (prononcer /dɛ̃g/ grippe ou palu , est une infection virale endémique dans les pays tropicaux La dengue est une arbovirose , transmise à l'être humain par l'intermédiaire de la piqûre d'un moustique diurne du genre Aedes , lui-même infecté par un virus de la dengue de la famille des flavivirus Cette infection virale entraine classiquement fièvre, mal de tête, douleurs musculaires et articulaires, fatigue, nausées, vomissements et éruption cutanée. Biologiquement on retrouve habituellement une baisse des plaquettes. La guérison survient généralement en une semaine. Il existe des formes hémorragiques ou avec syndrome de choc , rares et sévères, pouvant entrainer la mort. Il n'existe pas encore de vaccin et pas de traitement spécifique antiviral . La prise en charge repose sur un traitement symptomatique à base de médicament contre la fièvre et la douleur. Cependant, la dengue pouvant en de rares cas évoluer vers une forme hémorragique, la prise d'

32. Dengue | Define Dengue At Dictionary.com
–noun Pathology . an infectious, eruptive fever of warm climates, usually epidemic, characterized esp. by severe pains in the joints and muscles. Use dengue in a Sentence
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/dengue?qsrc=2446

33. Institut Pasteur - Dengue
L Institut Pasteur pr sente son dossier pid miologie, pr vention et traitement.
http://www.pasteur.fr/ip/easysite/go/03b-00000j-0f0/presse/fiches-sur-les-maladi
Accueil English Plan du site Newsletter ... Fiches sur les maladies infectieuses / Dengue
La dengue
La dengue est décrite comme une « grippe tropicale » depuis le XVIIIe siècle. La maladie est transmise à l'homme par le moustique du genre Aedes. Les formes graves de la maladie sont la dengue hémorragique et la dengue avec syndrome de choc qui peuvent s'avérer mortelles. L'incidence de la dengue progresse actuellement de manière très importante au niveau mondial. L'OMS estime à 50 millions le nombre de cas annuels, dont 500 000 cas de dengue hémorragique qui, faute de traitement, sont mortels dans 20% des cas.
Epidémiologie
zone intertropicale.
Aedes aegypti.
Symptômes
Moyens de lutte
ni traitement ni vaccin
A l'Institut Pasteur
), de Fernando Arenzana-Seisdedos ( Virologie Structurale ) et de Nicole Guiso ( CNR
Octobre 2010
consultez nos pages "dons et legs"
Fiches maladies

34. Dengue And Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever
Division of VectorBorne Infectious Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Public Health Service, U.S. Department of
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC88892/?tool=pubmed

35. Dengue
L Organisation mondiale de la sant (OMS) propose des liens conduisant ses ressources sur le sujet.
http://www.who.int/topics/dengue/

36. Dengue
Home Yellow Fever dengue Japanese encephalitis Hepatitis C West Nile Virus. dengue Virus Profile. The dengue virus is a member of the virus family Flaviviridae and is
http://www.stanford.edu/group/virus/flavi/2000/dengue.htm
Home Yellow Fever Dengue Japanese encephalitis ... West Nile Virus
Dengue Virus Profile
The Dengue virus is a member of the virus family Flaviviridae and is transmitted to people through the bite of the mosquitos Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus . Dengue virus is now believed to be the most common arthropod-borne disease in the world. Dengue is mainly found in the tropics because the mosquitoes require a warm climate. A major fear of epidemiologists is that the mosquitoes will develop resistance to cooler climates and then be able to infect people in the United States and other temperate climates. The virus is transmitted when a mosquito of the Aedes genus bites an individual infected with dengue virus. The virus in the blood of the infected individual then infects the mosquito and travels from the mosquito's stomach to its salivary glands were the virus multiplies. The virus is then injected into another person when the mosquito injects anticoagulants that prevent blood clotting when the mosquito is feeding. The mosquito remains able to transmit dengue for its entire life. Each year, 100 million people become infected with dengue virus. People first reported the existence of dengue-like disease in 1779 but it was most likely present long before in first appeared in literature. However, the majority of deaths that result from dengue infection result from Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF) and Dengue Shock Syndrome (DSS). People who develop DHF have a 5% chance of death but if they go on to develop DSS then the mortality rate can rise as high as 40%.

37. Dengue : Sites Et Documents En Langue Franaise
Le catalogue et index de sites m dicaux francophones (CISMeF) du CHU de Rouen propose de ressources consacr es cette maladie.
http://www.chu-rouen.fr/ssf/pathol/dengue.html
Dengue Terme en Anglais : dengue [MeSH] : Maladie infectieuse ruptive, fbrile, aigu provoque par quatre virus de la DENGUE relis antigniquement mais ayant des srotypes distincts. Ces virus sont transmis par des moustiques de type Aedes et plus particulirement par Aedes aegypti. La dengue classique (fivre de la dengue) est retrouve dans des rgions infectes par ce moustique. Elle est caractrise par de la fivre, des myalgies, des cphales et une ruption. La DENGUE HEMORRAGIQUE est une forme plus virulente de l'infection par ces virus et une entit clinique spare. (From Dorland, 28th ed)
[VIDAL] : Maladie virale tropicale transmise par le moustique Aedes. Synonyme CISMeF DF ; FD
Synonyme MeSH Fivre dengue Voir aussi virus dengue
Appartient au(x) Mtaterme(s) : infectiologie virologie Vous pouvez consulter : Ou consulter ci-dessous une slection des principales ressources :
Qualificatifs : statistiques et donnes numriques
thrapie

cours

38. DENGUE, DENGUE And Side Effects
Read about dengue. dengue is an infectious disease caused by a virus. You can get it if a
http://www.patientsville.com/conditions/dengue.htm

39. Dengue Et Dengue H Morragique
L Organisation mondiale de la sant (OMS) propose son aide-m moire.
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs117/

40. Dengue: EMedicine Dermatology
Overview dengue fever is a mosquitoborne viral disease caused by 1 of 4 antigenically distinct dengue flaviviruses dengue virus 1 (DEN-1), dengue virus 2 (DEN-2), dengue
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1133949-overview

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