Of Mice, Men, and Microbes: HantavirusElsevier, 28 июн. 1999 г. - Всего страниц: 278 In May 1993, a cluster of cases of a lethal disease among healthy young people brought the attention of the world to the southwestern deserts. A previously unknown disease was killing up to 80% of the people it infected. The reaction in the area and across the nation mixed fear, lack of information, and the struggles of doctors to save the victims of an unknown killer with hard science and the age old rhythmns of the desert. What came out was the story of a virus that had been killing since man arrived in the American continents, Hantavirus, with deadly relatives across the Americas and across the world. This book explains why and how the virus kills, and why it is still killing today. Why all of the science aimed at a virus identified back in 1993 has not brought a vaccine or a cure is part of the story, as is how that killer virus fits into the story of "new" diseases across the world. The story of hantavirus disease, what has happened since that first outbreak, and what the real risks are is laid out by an experienced scientist and an award winning journalist living and working in the area of the 1993 outbreak.
|
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 5 из 29
... million victims. Nearly 1% of the entire world's o ulation was killed by this virus in less than a year. Today, only our elders can recall the events, and our society's collective memory of the e idemic is being relegated to the history ...
... millions of visitors stand on the rim of the Grand anyon, amazed that such a chasm could have been eroded one grain of sand at a time, their minds unable to encompass the notion that time has plodded along for so many millions of years ...
... millions in 14th-century Europe is spread here by the fleas hosted by prairie dogs. There are other animal-borne diseases that demand attention, including, occasionally, rabies. This is still not, by any stretch of the imagination, a ...
... million Europeans fell victim to plague in the Middle Ages, over one-third of the population. Plague is still a sizable problem in some areas of the world, and even in developed countries it is handled very carefully because of the ...
... million Americans. It was a sudden disease of the respiratory system, killing in hours. There had been a near miss in 1976, when a virus looking very like the Spanish influenza had shown up at Fort Dix, New Jersey. That one did not ...
Содержание
1 | |
13 | |
27 | |
41 | |
CHAPTER 5 OF MICE AND MEN | 59 |
CHAPTER 6 AT LAST A PLAN | 79 |
OUT OF ASIA | 99 |
CHAPTER 8 OTHER HANTAVIRUSES | 117 |
CHAPTER 11 CHANGES CONCEALMENT AND TROJAN HORSES | 163 |
CHAPTER 12 COUSINS | 183 |
CHAPTER 13 WHAT WE KNOW | 199 |
CHAPTER 14 HOW TO STOP A VIRUS | 215 |
CHAPTER 15 OUTBREAKS | 233 |
Centers for Disease Control Guidelines on Prevention of HPS | 249 |
Sources of Further Information | 257 |
Abbreviations | 264 |
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Of Mice, Men, and Microbes: Hantavirus David Richard Harper,Andrea S. Meyer Недоступно для просмотра - 1999 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Популярные отрывки
Ссылки на эту книгу
Viral Fitness: The Next SARS and West Nile in the Making Jaap Goudsmit M.D. Ограниченный просмотр - 2004 |