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VECTOR-BORNE DISEASES

Exhibiting 476 entries found in the GMN corpus.

YearTitle & TagsAuthor(s)
1799 CEA description of the American yellow fever, which prevailed at Charleston, in South Carolina, in the year 1748.
1904 CE“Tick fever”.
1951 CE2:4-Diaminopyrimidines – a new series of antimalarials.
1951 CEA 2:4-diamino pyrimidine in the treatment of proguanil-resistant laboratory malarial strains.
1972 CEA bibliography on Chagas’s disease (1909-1969)
1799 CEA brief history of epidemic and pestilential diseases. 2 vols.
1770 CEA chronological history of the weather and seasons and of the prevailing diseases in Dublin. With their various periods, successions, and revolutions, during the space of forty years. With a comparative view of the difference of the Irish climate and diseases, and those of England and other countries ...
1976 CEA cluster of arthritis in children and adults in Lyme, Connecticut.
1721 CEA Collection of Very Valuable and Scarce Pieces relating to the last Plague in the year 1665. viz. I. Orders drawn up and published by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the City of London to prevent the spreading of the infection. II. An account of the first rise, progress, symptoms and cure of the Plague, being the substance of a letter from Doctor Hodges to a person of quality. III. Necessary directions for the prevention for cure of the plague, with divers remedies of small charge by the College of Physicians. IV. Reflections on the Weekly Bills of Mortality, so far as they relate to all the plagues which have happend in London from the year 1592 to the Great Plague in 1665, and some other particular diseases. With a preface shewing the usefulness of this collection: some errors of Dr. Mead, and his misrepresentations of Dr. Hodges and some authors. To which is added An Account of the plague at Naples in 1656, etc. [Compiled by William Beckett.].
1900 CEA comparative study of the biological characters and pathogenesis of bacillus X (Sternberg), bacillus icteroides (Sanarelli), and the Hog Cholera Bacillus (Salmon and Smith).
1793 CEA description of the malignant, infectious fever prevailing at present in Philadelphia; with an account of the means to prevent infection, and the remedies and method of treatment, which have been found most successful.
1970 CEA history of bubonic plague in the British Isles.
1891 CE​–1894 CEA history of epidemics in Britain. Vol. 1: From A. D. 664 to the extinction of plague. Vol. 2: From the extinction of plague to the present time.
1722 CEA journal of the plague year: Being observatrions or memorials, of the most remarkable occurrences, as well publick as private, which happened in London during the last great visitation in 1665. Written by a citizen who continued all the while in London. Never made publick before.
1997 CEA melancholy scene of devastation: The public response to the 1793 Philadelphia yellow fever epidemic. Edited by J. Worth Estes and Billy G. Smith.
1909 CEA micro-organism which apparently has a specific relationship to Rocky Mountain spotted fever. A preliminary report.
1901 CE​–1910 CEA monograph of the Culicidae, or mosquitoes. Mainly compiled from the collections received at the British Museum from various parts of the world in connection with the cause of malaria conducted by the Colonial Office and the Royal Society. 4 vols. and atlas.
1794 CEA narrative of the proceedings of the black people during the late awful calamity in Philadelphia, in the year 1793: and a refutation of some censures thrown upon them in some late publications.
1940 CEA neurotropic virus isolated from the blood of a native in Uganda.
1922 CEA new malaria parasite of man.
2012 CEA new phlebovirus associated with severe febrile illness in Missouri.
2019 CEA new segmented virus associated with human febrile illness in China.
1900 CEA note on the interval between infecting and secondary cases of yellow fever from the records of yellow fever at Orwood and Taylor, Mississippi, in 1898.
1911 CEA plague-like disease of rodents.
1816 CEA practical account of the Mediterranean fever, as it appeared in the ships and hospitals of His Majesty's fleet on that station: With cases and dissections. To which are added facts and observations, illustrative of the causes, symptoms and treatment comprehending the history of the fever in the fleet, during the years 1810, 1811, 1813, and of the Gibraltar and Carthagena fevers.
2020 CEA sensory appendage protein protects malaria vectors from pyrethroids.
1793 CEA short account of the malignant fever, lately prevalent in Philadelphia: With a statement of the proceedings that took place on the subject in different parts of the United States.
1720 CEA short discourse concerning pestilential contagion, and the methods to be used to prevent it.
1933 CEA sixth venereal disease. Climatic bubo, lymphogranuloma inguinale, esthioméne, chronic ulcer and elephantiasis of the genito-ano-rectal region, inflammatory stricture of the rectum.
1819 CEA statement of the occurrences during a malignant yellow fever in the city of New-York, in the summer and autumnal months of 1819; and of the check given to its progress, by the measures adopted by the Board of Health. With a list of cases and names of sick persons, and a map of their places of residence within the infected and proscribed limits: With a view of ascertaining, by comparative arguments, whether the distemper was engendered by domestic causes, or communicated by human contagion from foreign ports.
1932 CEA study of monkey-malaria, and its experimental transmission to man.
1850 CE​–1854 CEA systematic treatise, historical, etiological, and practical, on the principal diseases of the interior valley of North America as they appear in the Causcasian, African, Indian, and Esquimaux varieties of Its population. 2 vols.
1791 CEA treatise of the plague: Containing an historical journal, and medical account, of the plague, at Aleppo, in the years 1760, 1761, and 1762.
1926 CEA treatise on pneumonic plague.
1784 CEA treatise on the glandular disease of Barbadoes: Proving it to be seated in the lymphatic system.
1936 CEA virus isolated in 1935 epidemic of summer encephalitis in Japan.
1933 CEA yellow fever protection test in mice by intracerebral injection.
1928 CEA yellow fever vaccine.
1908 CE​–1912 CEAbhandlungen aus der Seuchengeschichte und Seuchenlehre. Pt. 1: Die Pest. Pt. 2: Die Cholera. 2 vols. in 3.
1879 CEAdditional notes on filaria sanguinis hominis and filiaria disease.
1960 CEAëdes Aegypti (L.) The yellow fever mosquito: Its life history, bionomics and structure.
1548 CEAlexandrū Trallianū Iatrū Biblia Dyokaideka. Alexandri Tralliani medici libri XII. Rhazae De pestilentia libellus ex Syrorum lingua in Graecam translatus. Edited by Jacques Goupil.
1789 CEAn account of the bilious remitting fever. In his Medical inquiries and observations, 1, 104-21
1794 CEAn account of the bilious remitting yellow fever, as it appeared in the city of Philadelphia in the year 1793.
1803 CEAn account of the native Africans in the neighbourhood of Sierra Leone; to which is added, an account of the present state of medicine among them. 2 vols.
1789 CEAn account of the principle lazarettos in Europe. With various papers relative to the plague: Together with further observations on some foreign prisons and hospitals and additional remarks on the present state of those in Great Britain and Ireland.
1839 CEAn account of the yellow fever which appeared in the city of Galveston, Republic of Texas, in the autumn of 1839, with cases and dissections,
1822 CEAn account of the yellow fever which occurred in the city of New York, in the year 1822, to which is prefixed a brief sketch of the different pestilential diseases, with which this city was afflicted, in the years 1798, 1799, 1803 & 1805, with the opinion of several of our most eminent physicians, respecting the origin of the disease, its prevention and cure.To which is added a correct list of all the deaths by yellow fever during the late season.
1910 CEAn acute infectious disease of unknown origin. A clinical study based on 221 cases.
1794 CEAn enquiry into, and observations upon the causes and effects of the epidemic disease, which raged in Philadelphia from the month of August till towards the middle of December, 1793.