نتایج جستجو برای: smallpox

تعداد نتایج: 2761  

2018
A Diouf H Trottier T J Youbong N F Ngom-Guéye O Ndiaye A Seck D Sarr S Diop M Seydi S Mboup V K Nguyen A Jaye

We examined the association between a history of smallpox vaccination and immune activation (IA) in a population of antiretroviral therapy-naïve people living with HIV (PLHIV). A cross-sectional study was conducted in Senegal from July 2015 to March 2017. Smallpox vaccination was ascertained by the presence of smallpox vaccine scar and IA by the plasma level of β-2-microglobulin (β2m). The asso...

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2001
J. W. LeDuc P. B. Jahrling

Concern that smallpox virus may be used as a biological weapon of mass destruction has prompted calls for production of additional vaccine and new research into variola virus diagnostics and clinical interventions. Only 15.4 million doses of smallpox vaccine, produced approximately 20 years ago, exist in the United States (1). While virtually all lots remain potent, additional vaccine would cle...

Journal: :Applied microbiology 1968
V J Fuller R W Kolb

The potency of the U.S. Reference Smallpox Vaccine, Lot 2, the International Reference Preparation of Smallpox Vaccine, and commercial smallpox vaccines was determined by the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) and rabbit scarification (RS) potency assay methods. The mean titer of the U.S. Reference (based on 107 ampoules) was 10(8.1) pock-forming units (PFU) per ml and that of the International Ref...

Journal: :Bulletin of the World Health Organization 1994

This Memorandum discusses the fate of variola virus stocks which have been kept in two WHO Collaborating Centres, as well as cloned DNA fragments of variola virus genome, smallpox vaccine, and seed vaccinia virus for the production of this vaccine. General and specific recommendations are given concerning destruction of variola virus; storage, distribution and handling of cloned DNA fragments o...

Journal: :Ciencia & saude coletiva 2011
Gilberto Hochman

The aim of this paper is to discuss the emergence and establishment of a "culture of immunization" in the contemporary Brazil from the eradication of smallpox. This culture is associated with a long process of introduction of vaccines, vaccination campaigns and mass vaccination undertaken by the Brazilian government since the late nineteenth century. Particular importance is attributed to the c...

Journal: :Epidemiology 2003
Edward H Kaplan Lawrence M Wein

The global eradication of smallpox stands among the most important public health achievements of the last century. However, fears that smallpox bioweapons have fallen into the hands of rogue states or terrorist organizations have rekindled interest in the methods used to control smallpox outbreaks. Surveillance-containment employing ring vaccination, whereby symptomatic smallpox cases were soug...

Journal: :Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin 2004
P Bossi A Tegnell A Baka F van Loock A Werner J Hendriks H Maidhof G Gouvras

Smallpox is a viral infection caused by the variola virus. It was declared eradicated worldwide by the Word Health Organization in 1980 following a smallpox eradication campaign. Smallpox is seen as one of the viruses most likely to be used as a biological weapon. The variola virus exists legitimately in only two laboratories in the world. Any new case of smallpox would have to be the result of...

Rasoul Pourangi,

This article was presented by the author at the Vaccination Seminar of May 26, 1972, National University Medical School.

Journal: :CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne 1999
J W McIntyre C S Houston

Edward Jenner's first treatise in 1798 described how he used cowpox material to provide immunity to the related smallpox virus. He sent this treatise and some cowpox material to his classmate John Clinch in Trinity, Nfld., who gave the first smallpox vaccinations in North America. Dissemination of the new technique, despite violent criticism, was rapid throughout Europe and the United States. W...

2011
Victoria Wahl-Jensen Jennifer A. Cann Kathleen H. Rubins John W. Huggins Robert W. Fisher Anthony J. Johnson Fabian de Kok-Mercado Thomas Larsen Jo Lynne Raymond Lisa E. Hensley Peter B. Jahrling

Smallpox, caused by variola virus (VARV), is a devastating human disease that affected millions worldwide until the virus was eradicated in the 1970 s. Subsequent cessation of vaccination has resulted in an immunologically naive human population that would be at risk should VARV be used as an agent of bioterrorism. The development of antivirals and improved vaccines to counter this threat would...

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