Search results for "Cowpox"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Biosynthesis of the Collagen-like C1q Molecule and its Receptor Functions for Fc and Polyanionic Molecules on Macrophages

1983

At the beginning of the nineteenth century, knowledge of immunity was limited to a few practical methods based on empirical observations, e.g., the observation by Jenner in 1798 that inoculation with cowpox material induced an immunity to smallpox. The discoveries by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch that microorganisms caused fermentations and were responsible for a number of infectious diseases, greatly advanced the concepts of susceptibility and immunity in a limited number of diseases. In the late nineteenth century, the complement system was discovered by Fodor(1887), Nuttall(1888), and Buchner (1889a, b) through studying the bactericidal action of blood serum. It was recognized that killi…

biologyInoculationCowpoxPhilosophymedicine.diseaseImmunoglobulin GComplement systemMicrobiologyBlood serumImmunityImmunologybiology.proteinmedicineAntibodyComplement C1s
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MILKER’S NODULE. A PERPLEXING FARMYARD INFECTION AND THREAT TO THE IMMUNOCOMPROMISED

2017

Milker’s nodules, also called paravaccinia, is a DNA virus transmitted from infected cows to humans. It results from contact with cattle, cattle byproducts, or fomites. Classified as an occupational disorder, those at risk of exposure include farmers, butchers, and agricultural tourists. The viral infection begins 5—15 days after inoculation as an erythematous-purple, round nodule with a clear depressed center, and a surrounding erythematous ring. While familiar to those in farming communities, the presence of the nodule may be concerning to others, particularly the immunosuppressed. Milker’s nodules are selflimited in immunocompetent individuals and heal without scarring within 8 weeks. An…

paravacciniaoccupational infectionmilker’s noduleDiseaseVirusparapoxviruszoonotic diseasegraft-versus-host diseaselcsh:Dermatologymedicineanimal to humanErythema multiformehematopoietic stem cell transplantorfimmunosuppressedpsuedocowpoxvirusbiologybusiness.industryerythema multiformeCancerNodule (medicine)lcsh:RL1-803farmyard poxmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyGraft-versus-host diseasepoxvirusParapoxvirusMilker's nodulemedicine.symptombusinessVestnik dermatologii i venerologii
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Serological Survey of Rodent-Borne Viruses in Finnish Field Voles

2014

In northern Europe, rodent populations display cyclic density fluctuations, which can be correlated with the human incidence of zoonotic diseases they spread. During density peaks, field voles (Microtus agrestis) become one of the most abundant rodent species in northern Europe, yet little is known of the viruses they host. We screened 709 field voles, trapped from 14 sites over three years, for antibodies against four rodent-borne, potentially zoonotic viruses or virus groups: hantaviruses, lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), Ljungan virus (LV) and orthopoxviruses (OPV). Antibodies against all four viruses were detected. However, seroprevalence of hantaviruses, LV and LCMV was low. …

MaleOrthohantavirusviruksetHantavirus InfectionsCowpoxvirusesParechovirusOrthopoxvirusPoxviridae InfectionsLymphocytic ChoriomeningitisAntibodies ViralMicrobiologySeroepidemiologic StudiesZoonosesVirologymedicineAnimalsHumansLymphocytic choriomeningitis virusSeroprevalenceMicrotusFinlandHantavirusPicornaviridae InfectionsbiologyArvicolinaeIncidenceCowpox virusvirus diseasesOriginal Articlesbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyserological surveyInfectious DiseasesLjungan virusArvicolinaeParechovirusta1181FemaleSeasons
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