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Description: |
xix, 884 pages : illustrations (some color), maps (some color) ; 29 cm. |
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General Note: |
Revised edition of: Zoonoses / [edited by] S.R. Palmer, Lord Soulsby, and D.I.H. Simpson. 1998. |
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Summary, Etc. Note: |
Summary: "Zoonoses are diseases naturally transmissible between vertebrate animals and man including those transmitted by direct contact with infected animals or carcases, by food or water contamination, and by inhalation of infected dust. They are increasingly important in public health issues. Divided into three sections along the lines of bacteriology, parasitology and virology, this book comprehensively provides a systematic, cross disciplinary approach to the science and control of all zoonoses, written by international specialists in human and veterinary medicine. Chapters cover the history of each disease, the scientific basis for the control of zoonoses, the microbiology of the causative agent, pathogenesis, clinical features, symptoms and signs, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis. The epidemiology of each disease is described alongside the strategies for prevention and control. Each of these chapters have been updated for the second edition, and the book also includes new chapters on important public health topics such as interdisciplinary or policy issues as well as new chapters on emerging zoonoses such as SARS and other important emerging diseases and trends"-- Provided by publisher. |
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Bibliography Note: |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
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Contents Note: |
Contents: pt. 1. Introduction : 1. The global challenge of zoonoses control -- 2. Deliberate release of zoonotic agents -- 3. Veterinary and human health surveillance and risk analysis of zoonoses in the UK and Europe -- 4. Health impact assessment and burden of zoonotic diseases -- 5. Antimicrobial resistance : animal use of antibiotics -- pt. 2. Bacterial, chlamydia, and rickettsial zoonoses : 6. Anthrax -- 7. Brucellosis -- 8. Verocytotoxin-producing Escherichia coli (VTEC) infections -- 9. Lyme borreliosis -- 10. Tick borne rickettsial diseases -- 11. Flea borne rickettsial diseases -- 12. Epidemic and murine typhus -- 13. Scrub typhus -- 14. Listeriosis -- 15. Mycobacterioses -- 16. Campylobacteriosis -- 17. Chlamydiosis -- 18. Q fever -- 19. Other bacterial diseases -- 20. Leptospirosis -- 21. Yersiniosis and plague -- 22. Glanders -- 23. Salmonellosis -- 24. Tularaemia -- pt. 3. Viral zoonoses : 25. Arenaviruses -- 26. Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever -- 27. Foot-and-mouth disease, Vesicular Stomatitis, Newcastle disease, and Swine vesicular disease -- 28. Hantaviruses -- 29. Herpes B virus (Cercopithecine Herpes 1) -- 30. Influenza -- 31. Marburg and Ebola viruses -- 32. Mosquito-borne arboviruses -- 33. Poxviruses -- 34. Prion-protein-related diseases of animals and man -- 35. Rabies and rabies-like viruses -- 36. Rift Valley fever -- 37. Tick-borne encephalitides -- 38. Yellow fever -- 39. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) -- 40. Zoonotic paramyxoviruses -- 41. Hepatitis E virus : animal reservoirs and zoonotic risk -- pt. 4. Parasitic zoonoses : 42. African trypanosomosis -- 43. American trypanosomosis (Chagas disease) -- 44. The Leishmanioses -- 45. Giardia infections -- 46. Cryptosporidiosis -- 47. Toxoplasmosis, sarcocystosis, isosporosis, and cyclosporosis -- 48. Babesiosis and malaria -- 49. Microsporidiosis -- 50. Blastocystosis -- 51. Cysticercosis and taeniosis : Taenia solium, Taenia saginata and Taenia asiatica -- 52. Other adult and larval cestodes -- 53. Cystic echinococcosis -- 54. Alveolar echinococcosis (Echinococcus multilocularis) and neotropical forms of echinococcosis (Echinococcus vogeli and Echinococcus oligarthrus) -- 55. Zoonotic schistosomiosis -- 56. Other trematode infections -- 57. Strongyloidosis -- 58. Capillariosis -- 59. Angiostrongylus cantonensis and human angiostrongylosis -- 60. Zoonotic infections with filarial nematodes -- 61. Trichinellosis -- 62. Zoonotic hookworm infections -- 63. Anisakiosis (Anisakidosis) -- 64. Toxocarosis -- 65. Trichostrongylidosis -- 66. Scabies and other mite infections -- 67. Flea infestations -- 68. The Myiases -- 69. Histoplasmosis -- 70. Zoonotic infections with dermatophyte fungi -- 71. Occasional, miscellaneous, and opportunistic parasites and fungi -- 72. Fasciolosis. |
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Series Added Entry: |
Oxford textbooks in public health. |