U.S. intelligence analysis of patterns of infectious diseases and impacts/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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{{r|Lyme disease}} | {{r|Lyme disease}} | ||
{{r|Malaria}} | {{r|Malaria}} | ||
{{r|Nipah virus}} | {{r|Nipah virus}} | ||
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{{r|Tuberculosis}} | {{r|Tuberculosis}} | ||
{{r|U.S. intelligence and global health}} | {{r|U.S. intelligence and global health}} | ||
{{r|United States intelligence community}} | {{r|United States intelligence community}} | ||
{{r|Variola virus}} | {{r|Variola virus}} |
Latest revision as of 14:44, 23 June 2024
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- Antibiotic resistance [r]: The development of resistance to an antibiotic in an organism originally susceptible to it [e]
- Digital object identifier [r]: Unique label for a computer readable object that can be found on the internet, usually used in academic journals. [e]
- Ebola [r]: A virus that causes severe hemhorragic fever and often death, that is easily spread. [e]
- Electronic health record [r]: Longitudinal collection of electronic health information about individual patients or populations [e]
- Encephalitis [r]: Inflammation of the brain due to infection, autoimmune processes, toxins, and other conditions. [e]
- Escherichia coli [r]: A flagellated rod-shaped bacterium; a major species in the lower intestines of mammals. [e]
- Francisella tularensis [r]: Pathogenic, aerobic Gram-negative bacteria, that causes the circulatory disease tularemia, which can be contracted via contaminated food or drink, physical contact, spray, or bug bite. [e]
- Lyme disease [r]: Emerging infection transmitted by the bite of ticks carrying the spirochete bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi. [e]
- Malaria [r]: A tropical infectious disease, caused by protozoa carried by mosquitoes, which is the world's worst insect vector-borne disease [e]
- Nipah virus [r]: Respiratory disease of pigs caused by a paramyxovirus in the genus Henipavirus, transmitted from bats and is zoonotic causing a fatal encephalitis in humans. [e]
- Prion [r]: Simple proteins that do not contain any nucleic acid, thought to act as an infectious agent responsible for Creutzfeld-Jacob disease, kuru and possibly other degenerative diseases of the brain in humans, scrapie in sheep, and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). [e]
- Respiratory tract infection [r]: Illnesses caused by an acute infection which involves the upper respiratory tract: nose, sinuses, pharynx or larynx. [e]
- Salmonella enterica [r]: Rod shaped, flagellated, aerobic, Gram-negative bacterium that causes food poisoning and gastroenteritis. [e]
- Staphylococcus aureus [r]: Facultatively anaerobic, Gram-positive pathogenic coccus capable of producing suppurative lesions, furunculosis, pyemia, osteomyelitis, food poisoning, and may be resistant to commonly used antibiotics. [e]
- Tuberculosis [r]: Infectious disease of humans and animals caused by the tubercle bacillus and characterized by the formation of tubercles on the lungs and other tissues of the body. [e]
- U.S. intelligence and global health [r]: Add brief definition or description
- United States intelligence community [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Variola virus [r]: Orthopoxvirus species that cause smallpox and alastrim. [e]
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