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- Dengue y dengue grave - World Health Organization (WHO)
El dengue es una infección vírica transmitida por mosquitos En las últimas décadas ha aumentado enormemente la incidencia de dengue en el mundo
- Dengue Fever - National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases . . .
Dengue fever is an infectious disease carried by mosquitoes and caused by any of four related dengue viruses This disease used to be called "break-bone" fever because it sometimes causes severe joint and muscle pain that feels like bones are breaking Health experts have known about dengue fever for more than 200 years According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, up to 400
- Dengue - World Health Organization (WHO)
WHO fact sheet on dengue, providing information on symptoms, diagnostics and treatment, global burden, transmission, risk factors, prevention and control and WHO's work in this area
- Target Product Profile (TPP) for APP Antiviral Therapeutics - Dengue
Dengue virus infection *This target product profile is intended to highlight potential product attributes that may be useful for sponsors to consider; it is not intended to be used as regulatory guidance
- Dengue – Situación mundial
El dengue es una enfermedad vírica que se transmite al ser humano por la picadura de mosquitos infectados, típicamente en climas tropicales y subtropicales de todo el mundo, sobre todo en las zonas urbanas y semiurbanas El principal vector de la enfermedad es el mosquito Aedes aegypti y, en menor medida, Ae albopictus, aunque en algunas regiones como Europa y América del Norte este
- Stephen S. Whitehead, Ph. D. - National Institute of Allergy and . . .
Dengue remains among the most important globally re-emerging infectious diseases of the 21st century with 50–100 million symptomatic DENV infections occurring worldwide each year, resulting in approximately 500,000 hospitalizations, and 22,000 deaths
- Dengue and severe dengue - World Health Organization (WHO)
Dengue is a self-limiting febrile illness with symptoms ranging from extremely mild (asymptomatic) to severe Symptoms of dengue may be observed around 4–10 days after the bite of an infected mosquito Common symptoms are like those of the flu, with patients experiencing: As the disease progresses, patients can also experience respiratory distress, bleeding from the nose and gums and rapid
- Katzelnick Research Group - National Institute of Allergy and . . .
We use a multidisciplinary approach encompassing virology, immunology, and epidemiology to investigate protection against and susceptibility to emerging viruses to inform safe and effective deployments of vaccines Our primary expertise is in seroepidemiology, and our research focuses dengue, which we believe serves as a model pathogen for other complex, immune-evasive viruses
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