OL1 Bloodsucking insects and vector borne diseases
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Control and Management of Vector-Borne Diseases in Disaster Conditions
Disasters are a set of unexpected situations that occur as a result of natural misadventure or human manipulations. Depending on the type, time, and location of the events, the insect population causing vector-borne diseases is affected, which may eventually lead to widespread epidemics. Parasitic diseases such as malaria, leishmaniosis, arboviral diseases such as dengue fever, West Nile enceph...
متن کاملProblem Created Owing to Insects in Carrying Vector Borne Diseases and Combined Vector Control Approach
Vectors are living organisms that serve as vehicles to transmit a pathogen (a disease-causing agent like a virus or parasite) from a host to a human or to an animal or both, and vector-borne diseases are infectious diseases or illness transmitted through insects. This article combines practical information from successful vector control programs, including early use of chemicals and recent rese...
متن کاملVector-Borne Viral Diseases
1 Section of Infectious Diseases, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06512, USA 2Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, MS 39406, USA 3Department of Basic Medical Sciences, School of Medicine, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China 4 Institute of Biology and Medical Sciences, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Infection and Immunity, Soocho...
متن کاملEmerging Vector-Borne Diseases.
Several mosquito-borne viral infections have recently emerged in North America; West Nile virus is the most common in the United States. Although West Nile virus generally causes a self-limited, flulike febrile illness, a serious neuroinvasive form may occur. Dengue is the most common vector-borne viral disease worldwide, and it has been a significant public health threat in the United States s...
متن کاملVector-borne diseases.
Vector-borne diseases have been the scourge of man and animals since the beginning of time. Historically, these are the diseases that caused the great plagues such as the 'Black Death' in Europe in the 14th Century and the epidemics of yellow fever that plagued the development of the New World. Others, such as Nagana, contributed to the lack of development in Africa for many years. At the turn ...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Medical Entomology and Zoology
سال: 1999
ISSN: 0424-7086,2185-5609
DOI: 10.7601/mez.50.26