نتایج جستجو برای: infection bronchitis and avian influenza

تعداد نتایج: 16937873  

Journal: :Osteopathic Medicine and Primary Care 2007
Raymond J Hruby Keasha N Hoffman

Avian influenza is an infection caused by the H5N1 virus. The infection is highly contagious among birds, and only a few known cases of human avian influenza have been documented. However, healthcare experts around the world are concerned that mutation or genetic exchange with more commonly transmitted human influenza viruses could result in a pandemic of avian influenza. Their concern remains ...

2012
G. Dennis Shanks Alison MacKenzie Michael Waller John F. Brundage

Purulent bronchitis was a distinctive and apparently new lethal respiratory infection in British and American soldiers during the First World War. Mortality records suggest that purulent bronchitis caused localized outbreaks in the midst of a broad epidemic wave of lethal respiratory illness in 1916-1917. Probable purulent bronchitis deaths in the Australian Army showed an epidemic wave that mo...

2012
Suresh V Kuchipudi Stephen P Dunham Rahul Nelli Gavin A White Vivien J Coward Marek J Slomka Ian H Brown Kin Chow Chang

Aquatic birds are the natural reservoir for most subtypes of influenza A, and a source of novel viruses with the potential to cause human pandemics, fatal zoonotic disease or devastating epizootics in poultry. It is well recognised that waterfowl typically show few clinical signs following influenza A infection, in contrast, terrestrial poultry such as chickens may develop severe disease with r...

2013
Qi Yu Linqing Liu Juan Pu Jingyi Zhao Yipeng Sun Guangnian Shen Haitao Wei Junjie Zhu Ruifeng Zheng Dongyan Xiong Xiaodong Liu Jinhua Liu

To determine risk for avian influenza virus infection, we conducted serologic surveillance for H5 and H9 subtypes among poultry workers in Beijing, China, 2009-2010, and assessed workers' understanding of avian influenza. We found that poultry workers had considerable risk for infection with H9 subtypes. Increasing their knowledge could prevent future infections.

2012
John Kofi Odoom Samuel Bel-Nono David Rodgers Prince G Agbenohevi Courage K Dafeamekpor Roland M L Sowa Fenteng Danso Reuben Tettey Richard Suu-Ire Joseph H K Bonney Ivy A Asante James Aboagye Christopher Zaab-Yen Abana Joseph Asamoah Frimpong Karl C Kronmann Buhari A Oyofo William K Ampofo

BACKGROUND Influenza A viruses that cause highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) also infect humans. In many developing countries such as Ghana, poultry and humans live in close proximity in both the general and military populations, increasing risk for the spread of HPAI from birds to humans. Respiratory infections such as influenza are especially prone to rapid spread among military populat...

M. Kianizadeh M. Najafi R. Toroghi S.A. Pourbakhsh, S.Z. Gohar

Influenza A viruses possesses two virion surface glycoproteins including haemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA). The NA plays an important role in viral replication and promotes virus release from infected cells and facilitates virus spread throughout the body. To find out any genomic changes that might be occurred on NA gene of avian influenza circulating viruses, we have genetically analy...

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2007
Camille Lebarbenchon Chung-Ming Chang Sylvie van der Werf Jean-Thierry Aubin Yves Kayser Manuel Ballesteros François Renaud Frédéric Thomas Michel Gauthier-Clerc

Wild aquatic birds are considered to be the natural reservoir for influenza A viruses, and previous studies have focused mainly on species in the orders Anseriformes and Charadriiformes. In this study, we surveyed a larger spectrum of potential hosts belonging to 10 avian orders. Cloacal swabs (n=1,044) from 72 free-living bird species, were analysed by reverse transcription-polymerase chain re...

2010
Ornpreya Suptawiwat Pongsakorn Tantilipikorn Chompunuch Boonarkart Jate Lumyongsatien Mongkol Uiprasertkul Pilaipan Puthavathana Prasert Auewarakul

BACKGROUND Influenza viruses bind and infect respiratory epithelial cells through sialic acid on cell surface. Differential preference to sialic acid types contributes to host- and tissue-tropism of avian and seasonal influenza viruses. Although the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus H5N1 can infect and cause severe diseases in humans, it is not efficient in infecting human upper respirato...

2013
W C Chen W T Huang Y C Lin M C Liu H W Kuo J H Chuang J R Yang M T Liu H S Wu C H Yang J H Chou

Surveillance of avian influenza A(H7N9) virus infection in humans and detection of the first imported human On 3 April 2013, suspected and confirmed cases of influenza A(H7N9) virus infection became notifiable in the primary care sector in Taiwan, and detection of the virus became part of the surveillance of severe community-acquired pneumonia. On 24 April, the first imported case, reported thr...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2015
Salah Uddin Khan Benjamin D Anderson Gary L Heil Song Liang Gregory C Gray

INTRODUCTION Given that influenza A(H9N2) is recognized as a pandemic threat, we evaluated the overall burden of influenza A(H9N2) infections among avian-exposed human populations. METHODS We performed a systematic search of PubMed, AGRICOLA, and CAB Abstracts databases for literature published during 1997-2013. Studies reporting serological evidence of human influenza A(H9N2) infection among...

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