paratyphoid fever


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Related to paratyphoid fever: enteric fever
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  • noun

Synonyms for paratyphoid fever

any of a variety of infectious intestinal diseases resembling typhoid fever

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References in periodicals archive ?
Number of patients with laboratory-confirmed typhoid fever reported to CDC's National Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever Surveillance System, number of isolates tested by the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS), and antibiotic susceptibility--United States, 2006-2015 No.
Association between the incidence of typhoid and paratyphoid fever and meteorological variables in Guizhou, China.
In Calcutta she suffered from paratyphoid fever, and in Karachi she contracted polio, which left her with a disability.
The first was a new triple anti-typhoid vaccine developed by Fernand Widal, which combined protection against typhoid and paratyphoid fever. The other was a new pneumonia vaccine developed by Joseph Kerandel, an army physician.
It includes typhoid fever (caused by salmonella typhi) and paratyphoid fever (caused by S.
Newton and her colleagues analyzed 2008-2010 data from the National Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever Surveillance database, which contains demographic information, travel history and typhoid vaccination status for 5 years before illness onset in cases reported to the CDC.
"Water-borne diseases such as viral hepatitis (A&E), gastroenteritis, typhoid, paratyphoid fever, cholera, dysentery, E-coli diarrhoea, giardiasis, intestinal worms, malaria, dengue fever and poliomyelitis are daily taking lives because people don't care what they are consuming," speakers deplored.
A man, from Sparkhill, has tested positive for paratyphoid fever.
coli (VTEC), shigellosis, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, botulism, cholera, listeriosis, typhoid fever, paratyphoid fever, hepatitis A, cryptosporidiosis, and cyclosporiasis were included.
There it was found that along with her hepatitis, she was also suffering from paratyphoid fever! She remained in the hospital and, per doctor's order, continued to rest at home for six weeks.
(3) Although he did not initially make the connection with tick bites and ascribed the condition to a variant of paratyphoid fever, McNaught, a British Army doctor working in South Africa, had noted in 1908 the typical clinical findings of a febrile disease with a profuse rash, (4) and later entertained the suggestion of a colleague that similar cases followed tick bites.