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Num Mark Subjects (1-50 of 72) Year Entries
110 Found
1   Fever -- 10 Related Subjects   10
2 Fever.   18
3 Anderson, Laurie Halse. Fever 1793 : Novels for students. Volume 35 : presenting analysis, context, and criticism on commonly studied novels / Sara Constantakis, project editor  2011 1
4  

Fever, Acute Rheumatic -- See Rheumatic Fever


A febrile disease occurring as a delayed sequela of infections with STREPTOCOCCUS PYOGENES. It is characterized by multiple focal inflammatory lesions of the connective tissue structures, such as the heart, blood vessels, and joints (POLYARTHRITIS) and brain, and by the presence of ASCHOFF BODIES in the myocardium and skin
  1
5  

Fever, Amazon Black -- See Hepatitis D


INFLAMMATION of the LIVER in humans caused by HEPATITIS DELTA VIRUS, a defective RNA virus that can only infect HEPATITIS B patients. For its viral coating, hepatitis delta virus requires the HEPATITIS B SURFACE ANTIGENS produced by these patients. Hepatitis D can occur either concomitantly with (coinfection) or subsequent to (superinfection) hepatitis B infection. Similar to hepatitis B, it is primarily transmitted by parenteral exposure, such as transfusion of contaminated blood or blood products, but can also be transmitted via sexual or intimate personal contact
  1
6  

Fever, Break-Bone -- See Dengue


An acute febrile disease transmitted by the bite of AEDES mosquitoes infected with DENGUE VIRUS. It is self-limiting and characterized by fever, myalgia, headache, and rash. SEVERE DENGUE is a more virulent form of dengue
  1
7  

Fever, Breakbone -- See Dengue


An acute febrile disease transmitted by the bite of AEDES mosquitoes infected with DENGUE VIRUS. It is self-limiting and characterized by fever, myalgia, headache, and rash. SEVERE DENGUE is a more virulent form of dengue
  1
8  

Fever, Buck, 1876-1941 -- See Anderson, Sherwood, 1876-1941


  1
9 Fever -- chemically induced : Textbook of febrile neutropenia / edited by Kenneth V.I. Rolston, Edward B. Rubenstein  2001 1
10  

Fever, Chikungunya -- See Chikungunya Fever


An acute infection caused by a mosquito-borne alphavirus CHIKUNGUNYA VIRUS characterized by RASH; FEVER; JOINT PAINS; CONJUNCTIVITIS; MENINGOENCEPHALITIS; LYMPHOPENIA; and THROMBOCYTOPENIA
  1
11 Fever -- complications. : Febrile seizures / edited by Tallie Z. Baram, Shlomo Shinnar  2002 1
12  

Fever Convulsion -- See Seizures, Febrile


Seizures that occur during a febrile episode. It is a common condition, affecting 2-5% of children aged 3 months to five years. An autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance has been identified in some families. The majority are simple febrile seizures (generally defined as generalized onset, single seizures with a duration of less than 30 minutes). Complex febrile seizures are characterized by focal onset, duration greater than 30 minutes, and/or more than one seizure in a 24 hour period. The likelihood of developing epilepsy (i.e., a nonfebrile seizure disorder) following simple febrile seizures is low. Complex febrile seizures are associated with a moderately increased incidence of epilepsy. (From Menkes, Textbook of Child Neurology, 5th ed, p784)
  1
13  

Fever Convulsions -- See Seizures, Febrile


Seizures that occur during a febrile episode. It is a common condition, affecting 2-5% of children aged 3 months to five years. An autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance has been identified in some families. The majority are simple febrile seizures (generally defined as generalized onset, single seizures with a duration of less than 30 minutes). Complex febrile seizures are characterized by focal onset, duration greater than 30 minutes, and/or more than one seizure in a 24 hour period. The likelihood of developing epilepsy (i.e., a nonfebrile seizure disorder) following simple febrile seizures is low. Complex febrile seizures are associated with a moderately increased incidence of epilepsy. (From Menkes, Textbook of Child Neurology, 5th ed, p784)
  1
14  

Fever, Cyprus -- See Brucellosis


Infection caused by bacteria of the genus BRUCELLA mainly involving the MONONUCLEAR PHAGOCYTE SYSTEM. This condition is characterized by fever, weakness, malaise, and weight loss
  1
15  

Fever, Dengue -- See Dengue


An acute febrile disease transmitted by the bite of AEDES mosquitoes infected with DENGUE VIRUS. It is self-limiting and characterized by fever, myalgia, headache, and rash. SEVERE DENGUE is a more virulent form of dengue
  1
16 Fever -- diagnosis : Fevers : types, treatments and health risks / Krista Brassfield and Kenneth P. Steckel, editors  2013 1
17 Fever -- Early works to 1800 : Ibn Al-Jazzar On Fevers  2000 1
18 Fever -- England -- London -- Drama : Oliver Twist. Episode eight / by Charles Dickens ; dramatised by Alexander Baron ; producer, Terrance Dicks ; director, Gareth Davies  1985 1
19  

Fever, Enteric -- See Typhoid Fever


An acute systemic febrile infection caused by SALMONELLA TYPHI, a serotype of SALMONELLA ENTERICA
  1
20  

Fever, Gibraltar -- See Brucellosis


Infection caused by bacteria of the genus BRUCELLA mainly involving the MONONUCLEAR PHAGOCYTE SYSTEM. This condition is characterized by fever, weakness, malaise, and weight loss
  1
21  

Fever, Hay -- See Rhinitis, Allergic, Seasonal


Allergic rhinitis that occurs at the same time every year. It is characterized by acute CONJUNCTIVITIS with lacrimation and ITCHING, and regarded as an allergic condition triggered by specific ALLERGENS
  1
22 Fever -- history   3
23 Fever -- immunology : Understanding fever and body temperature : a cross-disciplinary approach to clinical practice / Ewa Grodzinsky, Märta Sund Levander, editors  2020 1
24  

Fever in children -- See Also the narrower term Febrile convulsions


  1
25 Fever in children.   5
26 Fever in literature. : LITERATUR IM FIEBER;ZUR POETIK DER TEMPERATUREN BEI CONRAD, WOOLF, JOYCE UND TH. MANN  2021 1
27  

Fever, Jail -- See Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne


The classic form of typhus, caused by RICKETTSIA PROWAZEKII, which is transmitted from man to man by the louse Pediculus humanus corporis. This disease is characterized by the sudden onset of intense headache, malaise, and generalized myalgia followed by the formation of a macular skin eruption and vascular and neurologic disturbances
  1
28  

Fever, Katayama -- See Schistosomiasis


Infection with flukes (trematodes) of the genus SCHISTOSOMA. Three species produce the most frequent clinical diseases: SCHISTOSOMA HAEMATOBIUM (endemic in Africa and the Middle East), SCHISTOSOMA MANSONI (in Egypt, northern and southern Africa, some West Indies islands, northern 2/3 of South America), and SCHISTOSOMA JAPONICUM (in Japan, China, the Philippines, Celebes, Thailand, Laos). S. mansoni is often seen in Puerto Ricans living in the United States
  1
29  

Fever, Malta -- See Brucellosis


Infection caused by bacteria of the genus BRUCELLA mainly involving the MONONUCLEAR PHAGOCYTE SYSTEM. This condition is characterized by fever, weakness, malaise, and weight loss
  1
30  

Fever, Marsh -- See Malaria


A protozoan disease caused in humans by four species of the PLASMODIUM genus: PLASMODIUM FALCIPARUM; PLASMODIUM VIVAX; PLASMODIUM OVALE; and PLASMODIUM MALARIAE; and transmitted by the bite of an infected female mosquito of the genus ANOPHELES. Malaria is endemic in parts of Asia, Africa, Central and South America, Oceania, and certain Caribbean islands. It is characterized by extreme exhaustion associated with paroxysms of high FEVER; SWEATING; shaking CHILLS; and ANEMIA. Malaria in ANIMALS is caused by other species of plasmodia
  1
31 Fever of Unknown Origin -- diagnosis : Fever of unknown origin / edited by Burke A. Cunha  2007 1
32 Fever -- Pathophysiology   3
33 Fever -- Patients -- Hospital care -- Great Britain -- History : Fever hospitals and fever nurses : a British social history of fever nursing : a national service / Margaret R. Currie  2005 1
34  

Fever, Pharyngo-Conjunctival -- See Adenovirus Infections, Human


Respiratory and conjunctival infections caused by 33 identified serotypes of human adenoviruses
  1
35 Fever -- physiopathology   3
36  

Fever, Pontiac -- See Legionnaires' Disease


An acute, sometimes fatal, pneumonia-like bacterial infection characterized by high fever, malaise, muscle aches, respiratory disorders and headache. It is named for an outbreak at the 1976 Philadelphia convention of the American Legion
  1
37  

Fever, Puerperal -- See Puerperal septicemia


  1
38  

Fever, Relapsing -- See Relapsing Fever


An acute infection characterized by recurrent episodes of PYREXIA alternating with asymptomatic intervals of apparent recovery. This condition is caused by SPIROCHETES of the genus BORRELIA. It is transmitted by the BITES of either the body louse (PEDICULUS humanus corporis), for which humans are the reservoir, or by soft ticks of the genus ORNITHODOROS, for which rodents and other animals are the principal reservoirs
  1
39  

Fever, Remittent -- See Malaria


A protozoan disease caused in humans by four species of the PLASMODIUM genus: PLASMODIUM FALCIPARUM; PLASMODIUM VIVAX; PLASMODIUM OVALE; and PLASMODIUM MALARIAE; and transmitted by the bite of an infected female mosquito of the genus ANOPHELES. Malaria is endemic in parts of Asia, Africa, Central and South America, Oceania, and certain Caribbean islands. It is characterized by extreme exhaustion associated with paroxysms of high FEVER; SWEATING; shaking CHILLS; and ANEMIA. Malaria in ANIMALS is caused by other species of plasmodia
  1
40  

Fever, Rheumatic -- See Rheumatic Fever


A febrile disease occurring as a delayed sequela of infections with STREPTOCOCCUS PYOGENES. It is characterized by multiple focal inflammatory lesions of the connective tissue structures, such as the heart, blood vessels, and joints (POLYARTHRITIS) and brain, and by the presence of ASCHOFF BODIES in the myocardium and skin
  1
41  

Fever, Rock -- See Brucellosis


Infection caused by bacteria of the genus BRUCELLA mainly involving the MONONUCLEAR PHAGOCYTE SYSTEM. This condition is characterized by fever, weakness, malaise, and weight loss
  1
42  

Fever Seizure -- See Seizures, Febrile


Seizures that occur during a febrile episode. It is a common condition, affecting 2-5% of children aged 3 months to five years. An autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance has been identified in some families. The majority are simple febrile seizures (generally defined as generalized onset, single seizures with a duration of less than 30 minutes). Complex febrile seizures are characterized by focal onset, duration greater than 30 minutes, and/or more than one seizure in a 24 hour period. The likelihood of developing epilepsy (i.e., a nonfebrile seizure disorder) following simple febrile seizures is low. Complex febrile seizures are associated with a moderately increased incidence of epilepsy. (From Menkes, Textbook of Child Neurology, 5th ed, p784)
  1
43  

Fever Seizures -- See Seizures, Febrile


Seizures that occur during a febrile episode. It is a common condition, affecting 2-5% of children aged 3 months to five years. An autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance has been identified in some families. The majority are simple febrile seizures (generally defined as generalized onset, single seizures with a duration of less than 30 minutes). Complex febrile seizures are characterized by focal onset, duration greater than 30 minutes, and/or more than one seizure in a 24 hour period. The likelihood of developing epilepsy (i.e., a nonfebrile seizure disorder) following simple febrile seizures is low. Complex febrile seizures are associated with a moderately increased incidence of epilepsy. (From Menkes, Textbook of Child Neurology, 5th ed, p784)
  1
44  

Fever, Swamp -- See Equine Infectious Anemia


Viral disease of horses caused by the equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV; INFECTIOUS ANEMIA VIRUS, EQUINE). It is characterized by intermittent fever, weakness, and anemia. Chronic infection consists of acute episodes with remissions
  1
45 Fever -- Textbooks : Understanding fever and body temperature : a cross-disciplinary approach to clinical practice / Ewa Grodzinsky, Märta Sund Levander, editors  2020 1
46  

Fever Therapy -- See Hyperthermia, Induced


Abnormally high temperature intentionally induced in living things regionally or whole body. It is most often induced by radiation (heat waves, infra-red), ultrasound, or drugs
  1
47 Fever -- therapy : Clinical manual of fever in children / A. Sahib El-Radhi, James Carroll, Nigel Klein (eds.)  2009 1
48 Fever -- Treatment.   2
49 Fever -- Treatment -- Great Britain -- History : Fever hospitals and fever nurses : a British social history of fever nursing : a national service / Margaret R. Currie  2005 1
50  

Fever, Trench -- See Trench Fever


An intermittent fever characterized by intervals of chills, fever, and splenomegaly each of which may last as long as 40 hours. It is caused by BARTONELLA QUINTANA and transmitted by the human louse
  1
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