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         Dengue:     more books (100)
  1. Frontiers in Dengue Virus Research
  2. Dengue and Dengue Hemorrahgic Fever by D J Gubler, G Kuno, 1997-01-15
  3. Dengue Fever (Epidemics) by Katherine White, 2003-09
  4. Dengue (Tropical Medicine Science and Practice) (Tropical Medicine: Science and Practice) by Scott B. Halstead, 2008-10-30
  5. Dengue Virus: Detection, Diagnosis and Control (Virology Research Progress)
  6. Dengue (1881) by James Gray Thomas, 2010-09-10
  7. Dengue Haemorrhagic Fever: Diagnosis, Treatment and Control by World Health Organization, 1987-01
  8. Monograph on Dengue - Dengue Haemorrhagic Fever (South-East Asia Series , No 22)
  9. Dengue and Related Hemorrhagic Diseases by Susumu, M.d. Hotta, 1969-01
  10. New Treatment Strategies for Dengue and Other Flaviviral Diseases (Novartis Foundation Symposia) by Novartis Foundation, 2006-10-23
  11. The Official Patient's Sourcebook on Dengue: A Revised and Updated Directory for the Internet Age by Icon Health Publications, 2002-08
  12. Dengue Part 1 Medical - Part II Entomological by George F Lumley & Frank H Taylor, 1943
  13. El Dengue: Manual Del Juego Del Tresillo, Ó Exposición Metódica Y Razonada De Sus Reglas, Leyes Y Arte De Jugarle, Con El Reglamento ... (Spanish Edition) by Circasiano M. Dosílovo, 2010-04-22
  14. Dengue Fever - A Medical Dictionary, Bibliography, and Annotated Research Guide to Internet References by Health Publica Icon Health Publications, 2004-01-05

1. Reportaje: Dengue El Piquete Que Mata.
y Tamaulipas sonlo Estados más afectados por el dengue o "quebrantahuesos", una enfermedad que ha causado 10 muertos
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/ROBERTO_MURGUIA/dengue.htm
Reportaje/ Dengue: Piquete que mata
dengue Dos mil 226 casos de dengue dengue Las cifras oficiales estatales indican que las jurisdicciones sanitarias de Veracruz, en el centro de la entidad, Tuxpan al norte y Coatzacoalcos al sur, se mantienen como las de mayor incidencia. dengue dengue dengue
La Zona del Dengue
dengue dengue El dengue dengue dengue La alerta por el brote explosivo de dengue dengue como una gripe normal o malestares atribuidos a otras causa.COAHUILA: Por lo menos 250 casos de dengue dengue dengue MORELIA: Un total de 120 casos de dengue dengue GUERRERO: Un total de 59 casos de dengue dengue
Un mosco peligroso... El dengue y el dengue
piletas, tambos, cubetas, llantas, etc.
* Los maromeros se vuelven pupas o capullos para transformarse en mosquitos.
* Todo el desarrollo del mosquito se realiza en el agua dulce y limpia.
Puede ser mortal
* El enfermo presenta calenturas altas.
* Dolor en todo el cuerpo.
* Debilidad.
* Malestar general.
* Sangrado por la nariz.
Puede ser dengue URGENTE * Colocar mosquiteros en puertas y ventanas. * Acudir de inmediato a los Centros de Salud.

2. CDC Dengue Fever Home Page - CDC Division Of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases (D
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention presents detailed information about this mosquito-born Category Health Conditions and Diseases dengue Fever......CDC dengue Fever Home Page. Perspectives. Image The stylets (needlelikestructures History of dengue. The first reported epidemics of dengue
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/dengue/
Dengue Contents Introduction Fact Sheet Images Slides NEW! Information for Health Care Providers Dengue Fever Information for Travelers
CDC Dengue Fever Home Page
Perspectives
Image: The stylets (needle-like structures) and proboscis (elongated mouth) of an Aedes aegypti feeding. Dengue viruses are transmitted during the feeding process.
Dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) are caused by one of four closely related, but antigenically distinct, virus serotypes (DEN-1, DEN-2, DEN-3, and DEN-4), of the genus Flavivirus . Infection with one of these serotypes does not provide cross-protective immunity, so persons living in a dengue-endemic area can have four dengue infections during their lifetimes. Dengue is primarily a disease of the tropics, and the viruses that cause it are maintained in a cycle that involves humans and Aedes aegypti , a domestic, day-biting mosquito that prefers to feed on humans. Infection with dengue viruses produces a spectrum of clinical illness ranging from a nonspecific viral syndrome to severe and fatal hemorrhagic disease. Important risk factors for DHF include the strain and serotype of the infecting virus, as well as the age, immune status, and genetic predisposition of the patient.
History of Dengue
The first reported epidemics of dengue fever occurred in 1779-1780 in Asia, Africa, and North America; the near simultaneous occurrence of outbreaks on three continents indicates that these viruses and their mosquito vector have had a worldwide distribution in the tropics for more than 200 years. During most of this time, dengue fever was considered a benign, nonfatal disease of visitors to the tropics. Generally, there were long intervals (10-40 years) between major epidemics, mainly because the viruses and their mosquito vector could only be transported between population centers by sailing vessels.

3. Mosquitos And Dengue Fever
Information about the disease, with emphasis on the types of mosquitoes that transmit it, and a discussion of the two forms of dengue fever.
http://www.biohaven.com/dengue.htm

Member of the Internet Link Exchange
Mosquitoes and Dengue
Note that some information appearing in this document may not be current as of 1996.
Dengue fever, although little known in the United States, is a serious disease of Asia and Africa. Classic dengue, known for its low mortality but very uncomfortable symptoms, has become more serious, both in frequency and mortality, in recent years. Dengue is caused by an RNA flavivirus exhibiting many serotypes. Symptoms vary according to the serotype. The main vector of dengue, Aedes aegypti , flourishing in mankind's urban to suburban environments, has spread the disease to many parts of the world. Another mosquito, Aedes albopictus , a less important urban vector, has helped maintain the prevalence of dengue in Asian regions. A. aegypti is the most important vector of dengue. The spread of dengue throughout the world can be directly attributed to the proliferation and adaptation of this mosquito. The insect originated in Africa as a "tree-hole" mosquito, breeding in any temporary puddles of water left by recent rains. The "original" mosquito, it is believed, proliferated only during high humidity and rain. Only the eggs survived when the rain stopped and the puddles evaporated. Aedes eggs do need water to hatch, however. Thus, adult preponderance declined as the rains ceased. In short, the adult mosquitoes would bite (acting as possible dengue vectors) only during the rainy season. When man invented pottery and urbanized his surroundings, the mosquito developed a strain that could breed in man-made containers (i.e., clay jars) all year. Therefore, as the hypothesis suggests, this new strain of A. aegypti became more adapted to "urban" life as people moved away from the proximity of natural water and started to sequester water in containers.

4. Dengue-Información Básica
Descripci³n general, modos de transmisi³n, s­ntomas y tratamiento. Incluye informaci³n espec­fica sobre su incidencia en Costa Rica, por el Ministerio de Salud.
http://www.netsalud.sa.cr/ms/estadist/enferme/dengue.htm
DENGUE
Descripción Distribución Agente Infeccioso Modos de transmisión ... Vigilancia Epidemiológica
MINISTERIO DE SALUD - COSTA RICA 2001 (c)
*Bienestar y salud igual para todos*

5. DENGUE AND DENGUE HAEMORRHAGIC FEVER
dengue AND dengue HAEMORRHAGIC FEVER. dengue is a mosquitoborne infection whichin recent years has become a major international public health concern.
http://www.who.int/inf-fs/en/fact117.html
Fact Sheet No 117
Revised April 2002
DENGUE AND DENGUE HAEMORRHAGIC FEVER
Dengue is a mosquito-borne infection which in recent years has become a major international public health concern. Dengue is found in tropical and sub-tropical regions around the world, predominantly in urban and semi-urban areas. Dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF), a potentially lethal complication, was first recognized in the 1950s during the dengue epidemics in the Philippines and Thailand, but today DHF affects most Asian countries and has become a leading cause of hospitalisation and death among children in several of them. There are four distinct, but closely related, viruses that cause dengue. Recovery from infection by one provides lifelong immunity against that serotype but confers only partial and transient protection against subsequent infection by the other three. There is good evidence that sequential infection increases the risk of more serious disease resulting in DHF. Prevalence The global prevalence of dengue has grown dramatically in recent decades. The disease is now endemic in more than 100 countries in Africa, the Americas, the Eastern Mediterranean, South-east Asia and the Western Pacific. South-east Asia and the Western Pacific are most seriously affected. Before 1970 only nine countries had experienced DHF epidemics, a number that had increased more than four-fold by 1995.

6. Dengue Fever - Travel Medicine For The Adventure Traveler By Alan Spira, M.D. ,
dengue Fever is a viral infection common throughout the tropical regions of the world. It is spread by Aedes mosquitoes.
http://www.armchair.com/info/spira7.html
Info Escapes Air Hotels ... Get your major medical travel insurance from Armchair World
Dengue Fever
by
Somewhere in Tanzania, maybe it was in Uganda, a lucky mosquito found its prey, zoomed in on its target and stole some blood from an unlucky human. This bite began innocently enough - happening during the day, not causing much of an itch - but several days later it lost all pretense of innocence. Lethargy, an unusual amount of tiredness, was the first sign that something was going awry. It was soon followed by a headache behind the eyes that throbbed and pounded, with a sensation of pressure like a kettle brewing and boiling. A fever, mild at first, but later intense with sweating, came bundled with ferocious muscle aches. These aches were rooted deep in the calves and back, and felt like being punched from the inside-out. The once-dinner-for-a-stray mosquito became apathetic and lost all appetite. What on earth could this be? Malaria? Typhoid? What, what, what? A funny pink rash showed up soon after. It didn't itch, it didn't bleed, it didn't hurt. It just spread - over the chest, belly, and back. It, along with the fever, lightened after two days but just two days later returned with even greater dramatic force. Ah, I think we have enough clues and a diagnosis now... There can be a few days respite but the fever and rash often recur, and this is known as the 'saddleback pattern'. With Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever the blood cells are crippled and bleeding develops - in the gums, the skin, the intestinal tract. With the shock syndrome the blood vessels don't work quite right, and the blood pressure drops precipitously; as a result the blood fails to meet the metabolic demands of the cells in the body - which is the definition of shock.

7. CDC - Dengue Fever Information For Travelers
dengue Descripción Distribución Agente Infeccioso Modos de transmisión Reservorio Periodo de Incubación Periodo de transmisibilidad Susceptibilidad y resistencia Métodos de control Incidencia en Costa Rica Capacitación Vigilancia
http://www.cdc.gov/travel/dengfvr.htm
Page Contents Introduction Africa Southeast Asia and China Indian Subcontinent ... Australia and the South and Central Pacific
Contents Destinations Outbreaks Diseases Vaccinations ... GeoSentinel NEW!
National Center for Infectious Diseases USDA/APHIS NEW!
Importing food, plant, animal products U.S. State Department Pan American Health Organization World Health Organization Dengue Fever Information for Travelers
Please see the Destinations section for recommendations for specific countries.
Dengue viruses are transmitted by mosquitoes, which are most active during the day. These vector mosquitoes are found near human habitations and are often present indoors. Epidemic transmission is usually seasonal, during and shortly after the rainy season. influenza measles malaria typhoid ... leptospirosis , and scarlet fever. The symptoms of dengue can be treated with bed rest, fluids, and medications to reduce fever, such as acetaminophen; aspirin should be avoided. Travelers should alert their physician of any fever illnesses occurring within 3 weeks after leaving an endemic area. There is no vaccine for dengue fever; therefore, the traveler should avoid mosquito bites by remaining in well screened or air-conditioned areas. Travelers to tropical areas are advised to use mosquito repellents on skin and clothing, to bring aerosol insecticides to use indoors, and use bednets.

8. CTD Redirect Page
2003 Number of Reported Cases of dengue and dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF), Region of the Americas (by country and
http://www.who.int/ctd/html/dengue.html

9. Aedes Aegypti And Dengue Fever
Paper on Aedes aegypti as a disease vector.
http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/art98/aedrol.html
Aedes aegypti and Dengue fever by Roland Mortimer, Rio de Janeiro
There are many types of mosquito living in the tropical and sub-tropical regions of the world, we can roughly divide them into two groups, CULEX and AEDES, but perhaps one of the most important is Aedes aegypti . According to the World Health Organisation, the virus for Dengue fever is the most important arbovirus to man in the world, and since Aedes has been found to transmit this virus, it has been widely studied and blamed as the vector. This mosquito is small in comparison to others, usually between three to four millimetres in length discounting leg length. It is totally black apart from white 'spots' on the body and head regions and white rings on the legs. The thorax is decorated with a white 'Lyre' shape of which the 'chords' are two dull yellow lines. Its wings are translucent and bordered with scales. At rest, the insect turns up its hind legs in a curved fashion and usually cleans them by rubbing one against the other, or exercises them by crossing them and alternately raising and lowering them, this may even be a way of helping digested 'food' along the alimentary canal, but this is just a guess on my part.
Many people believe mosquitoes only live two or three days, but in actual fact, left unmolested they can live for months. The males of all species of mosquitoes do not bite humans or animals of any species, they live on fruit. Only the female bites for blood which she needs to mature her eggs. The eggs of most species are laid together in a raft form, but

10. Dengue
While there is no cure for this virus, Dr. Alan Spira offers advice for travelers on how to prevent contracting it.
http://www.santalucia.com.br/virus/dengue.htm

11. Dengue Y Dengue Hemorrágico En Las Américas: Guías Para Su Prevención Y Cont
Informaci³n general y estrategias para su control y tratamiento. En formato PDF.
http://www.paho.org/spanish/hcp/hct/vbd/arias-dengue.htm
1995, 116p., ISBN 92 75 31548 5
Código: PC 548
Precios: US$20.00 / US$15.00 en América
Latina y el Caribe
Idiomas disponibles: Español, Inglés
Texto completo en formato PDF (296 KB)
(56 KB)
Contenido
(49 KB)
(86 KB)
  • (81 KB) (1445 KB) Vigilancia (993 KB) (512 KB) (2161 KB) (1972 KB) (589 KB) (43 KB) Adiestramiento en programas de control del dengue (125 KB) Recomendaciones para los programas de control del dengue (831 KB) (268 KB)
  • Anexos (366 KB)

    Aedes aegypti A. aegypti y A. albopictus
    Mas sobre... Enfermedades transmisibles Dengue Fiebre hemorrágica Enfermedades transmitidas por vectores ... English version

    12. Pediatric Oncall- Dengue Fever
    Find out more about dengue fever and its complications and treatment.Category Health Conditions and Diseases dengue Fever......Find out more about dengue fever and its complications at www.pediatriconcall.com. dengueFEVER. Q What is dengue (pronounced as den goo) fever?
    http://www.pediatriconcall.com/forpatients/CommonChild/dengue_fever.asp

    Pediatricians
    Group Discussion Specialist Answers Share experience ... Doctors Corner
    DENGUE FEVER Q: What is dengue (pronounced as den- goo) fever?
    A:
    Dengue is a viral fever and is caused by 4 types of closely related viruses.
    Q: How does dengue fever occur?
    A:
    Dengue viruses spread to humans by the bite of female mosquitoes. These mosquitoes acquire the virus while feeding on the blood of an infected person. The virus circulates in the blood of infected humans for 2 –7 days leading to fever. Recovery from infection provided immunity against that particular virus but offers only partial protection against the other three viruses. Infact, subsequent infection increases the risk of a more complicated fever called as " dengue hemorrhagic fever ".
    Q: What are the clinical features of dengue fever?
    A:
    In infants and young children, dengue presents as a mild fever with rash. Older children and adults may have the classical symptoms of high fever, severe headache, pain behind the eyes, pain in the joints and muscles and rash. The pain in the back may be so severe that it is also called as backbreaking fever. Dengue fever is usually self-limiting.

    13. Vol.37 No.7--aspectos Clínicos Del Dengue Y Dengue Hemorrágico
    Descripci³n de los aspectos generales y cl­nicos de la enfermedad.
    http://www.insp.mx/salud/37/37-74.html
    RESUMEN ABSTRACT Dengue is a viral disease with clinical features that vary in intensity according to certain host and viral strain characteristics. Dengue hemorrhagic fever is practically a new clinical entity for the majority of physicians in the Americas and therefore the need to disseminate the most important clinical and epidemiological features that allow for the opportune diagnosis and therapy. The clinical spectrum of the disease includes asymptomatic to severe hemorrhagic forms and each stage has its own signs and symptoms. This clinical description explores the physiological mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of dengue hemorrhagic fever. This paper gives special emphasis to the alarm signs that foretell the presentation of the shock syndrome requiring emergency treatment and advances a classification scheme for epidemics. This scheme identifies the type of treatment and which patients need observation, laboratory tests and hospital care. Key words: dengue/diagnosis; therapeutics Fecha de recibido: 14 de agosto de 1995 Fecha de aprobado: 30 de septiembre de 1995

    14. REDIRECTING
    A technical discussion of an epidemiological study of dengue fever in Yangon.
    http://www.acithn.uq.edu.au/phd/thesis/thein.html
    This page has moved
    If you have not been redirected to the new site after 5 seconds, select link below.
    http://www.sph.uq.edu.au/acithn/thesis/THEIN.html

    15. Dengue Fever Hub
    Offers a definition followed by links to overviews, case reports, studies and FAQs.
    http://www.healthubs.com/dengue
    Dengue fever hub
    Dengue fever is a viral disease carried by the Aedes mosquitos. It is characterized by sudden onset, high fever, severe headache, joint and muscle pain and rash. Nausea and vomiting, loss of appetite, and altered taste sensation are common. A rash may appear 3 to 4 days after onset of fever and may spread from the torso to the arms, legs, and face. The disease is usually benign and self-limiting after about 7 days. Dengue may also present as a severe and fatal hemorrhagic disease, called dengue hemorrhagic fever. There is no specific treatment for dengue infection.
    Acne
    Allergy Antibiotics Antioxidants ... CDC Dengue Fever Home Page - by CDC Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases (DVBID). Dengue Fever and Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever - by John P. Roche, Boston College. Dengue by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Dengue Fever by University of Maryland Medicine Dengue fever by MEDLINEplus - updated by J. Gordon Lambert, MD, Associate Medical Director; RxRemedy. The fight against dengue, the viral nemesis of military operations

    16. The CDC Dengue Fever Home Page Has Moved - CDC Division Of Vector-Borne Infectio
    The CDC dengue Fever Home Page has moved. Please update your bookmarks orlinks to the new address http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/dengue.
    http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/dhspot98.htm
    Dengue Contents Introduction Fact Sheet NEW! Images Slides Information for Health Care Providers NEW! Dengue Fever Information for Travelers
    The CDC Dengue Fever Home Page has moved. Please update your bookmarks or links to the new address: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/dengue Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases
    National Center for Infectious Diseases
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC Home Search Health Topics A-Z This page last reviewed September 17 Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases
    National Center for Infectious Diseases

    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

    P.O. Box 2087
    Fort Collins, Colorado 80522 Accessibility

    17. WHO/OMS: Dengue
    WHO Fact Sheet Prevention and Control Burdens and trends, control programmes,prevention strategies. Vaccines and Immunization Vaccine
    http://www.who.int/health-topics/dengue.htm
    WHO Fact Sheet Prevention and Control
    Burdens and trends, control programmes, prevention strategies Vaccines and Immunization
    Vaccine development and research priorities Vaccine Research Surveillance and Response
    Global incidence, epidemiology, disease outbreaks, articles and publications Research and Development
    (UNDP-World Bank-WHO Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases, TDR)
    Research and training grants, TDRnews, image library WHO Publications
    Newsletter

    Global defence

    against the infectious disease threat

    Catalogue Disease Outbreak News Weekly Epidemiological Record WHO Home Search ... (c) WHO/OMS 2001

    18. Dengue FeverControl Room At Scout Bhaban Opens - Bangladesh Observer May 23
    Scout Bhaban (Bangladesh)medical facility, article in Bangladesh Observer.
    http://www.geocities.com/prevent_dengue/press/bomay23.html
    REGD. NO DA5, DHAKA. WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2001
    Dengue fever Control room at Scout Bhaban opens Bangladesh Scouts has opened a round-the-clock control room at Scout Bhaban in Kakrail aiming to create awareness about the dengue fever for checking the epidemic situation in the capital, reports UNB. Any person, including scouts and rovers, who wants to seek advice about the fever and its protection or donate blood for the patients may contact the control room over telephone number 9333651, said a press release on Tuesday. Scouts and rovers of various educational institutions are taking part in the dengue protection programme by visiting door-to-door including in slum areas and distributing leaflets to make the people aware of the disease.

    19. CHANGES IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF DENGUE TRANSMISSION UNDER CLIMATE WARMING SCENARI
    Abstract of paper showing that dengue fever and other insectborne diseases can be predicted to spread from the tropics to temperate areas with global warming and flooding.
    http://www.nal.usda.gov/ttic/tektran/data/000007/07/0000070756.html
    TEKTRAN
    CHANGES IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF DENGUE TRANSMISSION UNDER CLIMATE WARMING SCENARIOS
    Author(s):
    JETTEN THEO H
    FOCKS DANA A
    Interpretive Summary:
    Keywords:
    modeling computer simulation pest management mosquitoes flies ticks systems analysis arthropod borne diseases
    Contact:
    MAVE RESEARCH LABORATORY
    1600 S.W. 23RD DRIVE
    GAINESVILLE
    FL 32608
    FAX: Email:
    Approved Date: TEKTRAN United States Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service Updated:

    20. OPS - Situación Del Dengue Y DH En Las Américas. Trienio 96-98
    Informe estad­stico sobre el agravamiento de la situaci³n en Sur Am©rica a causa de la enfermedad.
    http://165.158.1.110/spanish/hcp/hct-dengue.htm

    Trienio 1996-1998
    Argentina: Brasil: Cuba: Aedes aegypti resultaron elevados, siendo el brote interrumpido tras intensas medidas de control vectorial. Aedes aegypti La respuesta de la OPS Como contribución reciente, y dando cumplimiento a la Resolución XXXIX del Consejo Directivo de OPS de 1996 se elaboró el "Plan Continental de Ampliación e Intensificación del Combate al Aedes Aegypti " preparado por un grupo de expertos, tomando como referencia los planes nacionales que los países previamente habían desarrollado. En el presente año y con el objetivo de determinar el estado de implementación del Plan Continental y asegurar la continuidad de los programas de combate al vector, mediante la elaboración de planes nacionales de acción para el próximo trienio, la OPS ha realizado en los meses de mayo y junio, tres talleres subregionales en: 1) Centroamérica, México y República Dominicana, 2) Area Andina y Cuba, y 3) Región del Cono Sur y Brasil. En el mes de mayo también la OPS realizó la evaluación del Programa de Prevención y Control de Dengue en México. Consideraciones de OPS Aedes aegypti
  • Aedes /dengue multisectorialmente, de tal forma que la responsabilidad de las acciones de control vectorial no recaigan solo en el sector salud.
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