People who experience both asthma and hay fever may also wheeze and become short of breath. |
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From dengue fever to malaria to yellow fever, this insect spreads more human illnesses than any other. |
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If perforation occurs in the stomach or intestines, fever and abdominal pain and tenderness may develop. |
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Note in particular the much lower incidence of diseases such as enteric fever and dysentery. |
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The attackers would have little concern of being exposed to secondary infection because Q fever is not communicable. |
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There were 31 registered cases of Marseilles fever in the past week and one case of Q fever. |
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In 1900 in Durban, South Africa, he died of enteric fever while serving with the Imperial Light Horse in the Boer War. |
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While official bird flu warnings reach fever pitch, the public seems to be keeping a cooler head. |
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Ultimately, unless his fever was reduced with intravenous liquids, it would scramble his brain like eggs in a frying pan. |
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You began to get a really bad fever and were sweating so she took your clothes and they are in the wash as we speak. |
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Many Roman authors testify to the red mullet fever which gripped their contemporaries in the first centuries ad. |
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The diagnosis of subclinical valvulitis and valvulopathy influences the secondary prophylaxis of rheumatic fever and endocarditis. |
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Or taking medicine such as acetaminophen may reduce fever or muscle aches often associated with influenza. |
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Aspirin and acetaminophen relieve cold and flu aches and reduce fever in flu. |
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If necessary, acetaminophen or ibuprofen can be used to relieve fever and headache. |
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Because most cases of pharyngitis are viral in nature, they can be treated with acetaminophen for pain and fever relief. |
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To reduce fever and make the child more comfortable, acetaminophen can be given. |
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Both acetaminophen and NSAIDs reduce fever and relieve pain caused by muscle aches and stiffness, but only NSAIDs can reduce inflammation. |
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Election fever is gripping the area, with no end of opinion polls every day. |
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Oil fever was created a few months earlier when oil was discovered by a gas company drilling at the flour mill in Washington. |
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Those who contract the virus and do show symptoms typically suffer from mild fever and head and body aches. |
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Famous members of this family cause dengue fever, yellow fever and Japanese encephalitis. |
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Anne tells Kitty that she is worried about Daddy, who has a fever and a rash, which looks like measles. |
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Persistent fever after the first week of treatment suggests a septic embolic complication or inadequate antibiotic therapy. |
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He is currently taking antibiotics due to a bout of jungle fever brought on by the damp conditions. |
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Some innovative makeup effects and a dose of bodacious jungle fever don't hurt either. |
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At that time there seemed to be a great deal of grippe and a serious epidemic of typhoid fever throughout the state. |
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At that time, she developed a low-grade fever but was subsequently afebrile. |
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Gastroenteritis can cause diarrhoea, stomach cramps, vomiting, nausea, fever and severe headaches. |
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Rebecca Hall confirms her star status by endowing Maria with a mixture of scrubbed piety, intellectual fever and human rattiness. |
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The problems are caused by salmonella and campylobacter, a bacteria found in raw meats that leads to fever and stomach upsets. |
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Even though his face was so gray, red patches of fever burned in his cheeks. |
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Since it is undesirable for the patient with fever to walk even as far as the toilet, a bed-pan or commode should be used. |
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In most cases the eruptive fever is divided into two sections, a moderately febrile stage and a fastigium or acme. |
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Since the 17th century, Iceland moss has been known in folk medicine under names such as lung moss or fever moss. |
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My first two days in the hospital are a blur, but on the third my fever broke and I started to feel a little better. |
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Runny nose, sore throat, dry cough, headache, aching muscles and a high fever are the classic symptoms of influenza. |
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Each subsequent rainy season left a slowly growing number of locals stricken with the classic symptoms of fever and nausea. |
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A person is most contagious just before the fever starts to about 4 days after the rash appears. |
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There is no malaria in Seychelles, and yellow fever and other tropical diseases are not a problem either. |
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If a mother runs a fever during labor for any amount of time, the baby goes directly to NICU, does not pass go, does not collect 200 dollars. |
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But treating hay fever symptoms is time-consuming, expensive and not always successful. |
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Your doctor may take tests to see what allergens are causing the hay fever symptoms. |
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I did have dengue fever last year which laid me low, I was in hospital for a week. |
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The bacteria that cause relapsing fever are related to those bacteria that cause Lyme disease. |
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This is dismissed by Holmes as a misinterpretation of the ravages of yellow fever and other tropical diseases. |
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The characteristic symptom of scarlet fever is a fine rash on the body that feels like sandpaper to touch. |
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In humoral physiology a good fever was seen to eliminate impurities from the body and clarify all the humours. |
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Patients with parrot fever have pneumonia with severe headache and scanty sputum sometimes blood stained. |
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If your lipstick comes in contact with a fever blister or cold sore, throw it away. |
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Investigators who worked on cholera, typhus, yellow fever, and Rocky Mountain spotted fever sometimes died of the diseases they were working on. |
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Visitors should be vaccinated against tetanus, polio, typhoid, yellow fever and hepatitis A. Stick to bottled water. |
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There was a risk of highly contagious swine fever being brought into the country as well as foot and mouth. |
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Recent outbreaks of diseases, including classical swine fever in Britain, had also highlighted the risks posed by imports of food products. |
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The clinical infection is characterized by chronic fever and hepatosplenomegaly. |
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He had a fever of 105 and was comatose when he arrived at the hospital late in January. |
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Headache, fever and drowsiness can lead to a deep coma but only very rarely. |
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As in streptococcal pharyngitis, acute rheumatic fever and poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis most often occur in children. |
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It's a fever that leaves him in a cold sweat, shaking and weak as if he's dying of some tropical disease. |
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Typically influenza is characterized by high fever while colds are without fever. |
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Add in fever and the fact that my cough has gotten significantly worse in the last two days, and I'm concluding that I have the flu again. |
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He died in 1917 from trench fever caught second-hand from an interviewee just back from the front. |
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Tolkien himself, a signals officer who served in the Battle of the Somme, was invalided home with trench fever after five months. |
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About two weeks after I entered the hospital I took hospital fever and was delirious for two or three weeks. |
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The other well-known consequences of rheumatic fever are cardiac valve lesions and a movement disorder called chorea. |
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Health workers also passed out information pamphlets about dengue fever and its dangers. |
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Foot-and-mouth is a highly contagious viral disease which causes blisters and fever in hoofed animals. |
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Curtis et al. concluded that cows with milk fever are four times more likely to also have a retained placenta. |
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Vitamin D has a more direct role in prevention of milk fever and other aberrations of calcium metabolism. |
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A few years ago there was a fad for using anionic salts in the cows' dry period to prevent milk fever when they calve. |
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On the return trip, Mary caught a chill and the subsequent fever nearly killed her. |
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This serious but rare condition may develop in children who are given aspirin when they have a fever or chickenpox. |
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Uncharacteristically, perhaps because the bellyache and the fever distracted him, he sat in the open rather than behind tree cover. |
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A viral etiology is strongly suggested by the absence of fever or the presence of conjunctivitis, coryza, cough, or diarrhea. |
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After 3 to 7 days, testicular pain and swelling subside, usually at about the same time that the fever passes. |
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At the end of the third sennight since the sickness had started, Raul's fever finally broke. |
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The bacteria causes both the mild Pontiac fever and the more serious Legionnaires Disease. |
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Both colds and flu start with a runny nose, tickly throat, fever and aches. |
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An epidemic of tick fever in the late nineteenth century forced cattle raisers to seek public assistance in eradicating the disease. |
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Which one of the following statements about the clinical presentation of tick-borne relapsing fever is correct? |
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It occurred to me at about 3am, as I lay in bed with a raging fever and hacking cough, that perhaps a visit to a doctor was in order. |
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At the same time the irritative fever and hectic hitherto so much dreaded in large abscesses are, with perfect security, entirely avoided. |
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Flag fever is unfurling across Manchester as the city is swept up on a wave of World Cup and Jubilee celebrations. |
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He caught scarlet fever when he was a young child and this affected his hearing. |
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The department also called for residents to go to hospitals once they catch a fever or feel soreness in their bones. |
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Her daughter then caught a fever that carried her off within twenty-four hours. |
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He is credited for establishing that a tick was the transmitter of Texas fever in cattle. |
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All cows with a fever were administered a non-antibiotic regimen of aspirin boluses and probiotic capsules. |
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Briefly, all patients with community-acquired pneumonia and fever are admitted to the isolation wards. |
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Seasonal Allergic Rhinitis, also known as hay fever or pollinosis, is a common condition among the general population in Western countries. |
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According to Dr. O'Toole, people are most at risk from hay fever when the pollen count is high. |
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During the Middle Ages, the Romans regarded herb bennet as an effective fever reducer. |
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In 1936 an outbreak of scarlet fever and diphtheria led to many Croydon residents being hospitalised for lengthy periods. |
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If you are the lucky one in Berlin, you can catch football fever filmed on celluloid by 45 film-makers. |
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Patients with severe neutropenia with fever or signs of infection and those with evidence of malignant disease should be hospitalized. |
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I was starting to get cabin fever and I quickly got up, gathering my books into my satchel. |
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At least 75 cases of dengue fever have been detected in hospitals in the city in the last week, the sources said. |
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In cases of typhoid fever caused by salmonella bacteria, early symptoms are the same. |
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Inhaled anti-inflammatory cortisone drugs can be used for both hay fever and asthma. |
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The type of pollen particle triggering hay fever is probably from trees, grasses or weeds. |
|
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Chemically salicin can be converted to salicilic acid, a very successful treatment of fever and gout. |
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With his courtly, old-fashioned manner, he may never have stirred Democratic crowds to a fever pitch. |
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Festival fever will hit Durrow this August Bank Holiday weekend when the annual carnival takes place. |
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Scarlet fever provides the classic example of an erythematous rash with subsequent desquamation. |
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He nursed me, dosing me with aspirin, sponging me off to keep the fever down. |
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On the second day of her sickness, she began to run a fever and fell into unconsciousness four times. |
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Despite the icy cold introduction to the New Year, football fever is beginning to heat up once again. |
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Seizures are most likely to occur early in an illness when the fever is rising quickly. |
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Duke Kingston developed a fever on their way back to the castle, and they soon figured out that the arrows had been poisoned. |
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Now, he was faced with their roguery that was reaching a fever pitch, under the guise of divine influence. |
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Outbreaks of yellow fever and cholera increased the role of city government in public-health matters. |
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You know you might get a fever and maybe even feel sick to your stomach after that. |
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A hundred years later the publican of the Cradock Hotel had an even better time when it was reported that Diamond fever had hit the town. |
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He worked on typhoid fever and tuberculosis a disease he contracted himself. |
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Like immunocompromised patients with fever, patients with rheumatic fever must be aggressively treated. |
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Kawasaki disease has surpassed rheumatic fever as the leading cause of acquired heart disease in children in the United States. |
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Sales fever gripped Salisbury as thousands of shoppers flocked to the city this week to snap up post-Christmas bargains. |
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He may have painted Madonnas beautifully but his first biographer Vasari suggested his death was not due to fever but to amatory excess. |
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This enables them to draw sufficient calcium from their own bodies to prevent milk fever after calving. |
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The calcium metabolized by the cow has a role in preventing milk fever at calving. |
|
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Radiological review of 13 children admitted with acute torticollis and fever found that just three actually had subluxation. |
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But they said it was just tonsillitis or glandular fever and they sent us home. |
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Cure a bad case of cabin fever by inviting friends over for an evening of cards or old-fashioned board games. |
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But if cabin fever does set in, it's nice to know you can take an excursion or soak up some culture. |
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At first, glandular fever is sometimes wrongly diagnosed, for example as a bacterial throat infection or tonsillitis. |
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Speculation about an imminent revaluation of China's renminbi against the dollar reached a fever pitch last week in the markets. |
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The first campaign of the newly reorganized Department of Health was directed toward lowering the city's typhoid fever rate. |
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This will help prevent complications such as rheumatic fever or an abscess around the tonsils. |
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But he said he did not think he had Lassa fever because his severe thigh-muscle aching was a symptom the nurses had escaped. |
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You might have one of them weird Jungle diseases like Lassa fever or the Clap. |
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Within a few days I felt lousy, weak, listless. I ran a low-grade fever for a few days, and my head hurt. |
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Interestingly, the traditional Assamese medical practitioners classified fever into twenty different types. |
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Atopic eczema is the most common type of eczema and is linked with hay fever and asthma. |
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People who breathe in the fine pollen may have an asthma or hay fever attack as a result. |
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For adults, paracetamol, aspirin or ibuprofen can help to relieve fever and pain. |
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In January the CDC reported two fatal cases of rat-bite fever and linked the disease Tularemia in hamsters to humans for the first time. |
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Carditis associated with rheumatic fever manifests as pericarditis, myocarditis, and most commonly, endocarditis. |
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Physical examination showed low-grade fever and a slightly tender, markedly enlarged spleen. |
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Dot-com fever and a robust economy had money pouring into the museum from longtime benefactors and new supporters alike. |
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Frankenstein lapsed into a delirious fever for several months, ranting and raving about killing the monster. |
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It seems probable that the mortality from rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease has decreased since the turn of the century. |
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Hay fever or some old fashioned antihistamine treatments with side effect drowsiness can generally impede your life style. |
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Rarely, an infant can contract the infection during delivery and develop a fever after birth. |
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At age 4, she contracted double pneumonia and scarlet fever simultaneously and almost died. |
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After finally recovering from that, he went down with glandular fever which kept him sidelined until the beginning of last season. |
|
When Sophie fell poorly with glandular fever and then chronic fatigue syndrome her home computer provided a lifeline to the outside world. |
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The illness results in recurrent attacks of chills and fever and can be deadly. |
|
As Newry's push for city status reaches fever pitch, a forgotten city lies merely 10 miles away from the frontier town. |
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Programmes to control leprosy, hepatitis and dengue fever are vividly shown. |
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As what usually happened to many young men of that era in the West, he caught gold fever and went to work in a gold mine. |
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The last time gold fever hit Scotland was in 1868, when gold reserves were discovered at Kildonan in Sutherland. |
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An existing, attenuated vaccine against yellow fever is not very effective for just this reason and has to be administered every four years. |
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The arthritic diseases seen in children are rheumatic fever and juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. |
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Acute rheumatic fever and poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis are the nonsuppurative complications of streptococcal pharyngitis. |
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His governorship of Hispaniola was the low point, an outburst of gold fever accompanied by the enslavement and slaughter of the native people. |
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After rounding Cape Horn, he lost most of his crew to gold fever in Valparaiso, Chile, where the venture ended. |
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No rationale exists for selecting nimesulide as the first drug of choice for fever or pain. |
|
Acute dysentery, typhoid fever and acute hepatitis were the next three most frequently reported diseases. |
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It is often only a fever but with generalized lymph gland and joint involvement. |
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At the time of the gold fever of 1850, he went to California and was engaged in mining for fifteen years. |
|
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Rob sat up, his fever was mostly broken, but it still raged at a dull throb. |
|
Spring fever is on its way and with it all, the buzz of gardening activities from the two legged creatures as well as those with many more legs. |
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The algorithm used by the strategy may result in overclassification of fever as malaria and hence overuse of antimalarials. |
|
An epidemic of tick fever forced cattle raisers to seek public assistance in eradicating the disease. |
|
Another form luxury fever takes is the appearance of premium versions of everyday products. |
|
Grand National fever is taking over in my 500 betting shops, with bets ranging from 50p to 5,000 coming one after the other. |
|
Typhoid fever continues to be a global health problem, especially in the tropics and subtropics. |
|
Within a month a new, savagely virulent haemorrhagic fever crept from the jungle. |
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The herb's anti-inflammatory aspirin-like chemicals mean it can also reduce fever and relieve the pain of rheumatism in muscles and joints. |
|
Gastrointestinal anthrax is characterized by severe abdominal pain followed by fever and signs of septicemia. |
|
They'll be conserving their resources for the last weeks, too, once grand final fever is out of the way and there are fewer distractions. |
|
Low backache and lower abdomen pain are common complaints and fever may accompany these symptoms. |
|
By suppressing the fever these children end up with chronic glue ear, sinusitis or chest catarrh. |
|
There was even less of a clue with regard to their implication in the pathogenesis of rheumatic fever and glomerulonephritis. |
|
She thought I had a fever beginning and forced me to drink one of her foul tasting tisanes. |
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Some small remnant of the fever must have clung to her, for she tossed and turned for hours before giving in to a light and unrefreshing sleep. |
|
She had a history of rheumatic fever at age 9 with subsequent development of rheumatic heart disease. |
|
Have you ever been diagnosed with an allergic condition such as hay fever or eczema? |
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The college lecturer had insisted that he had had a genuine cough caused by a combination of hay fever and a dust allergy. |
|
Although blood in the stool suggests invasive disease, fever is not a sensitive indicator of dysentery. |
|
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Chewing a piece of comb honey daily often helps to clear the nose and sinuses during hay fever attacks. |
|
An 1858 medical book described remittent fever as typhus modified by atmospheric influences. |
|
Immunologic diseases such as Reiter's syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis and rheumatic fever can also cause knee effusion. |
|
In World War II, there was a high incidence of leishmaniasis and sandfly fever in troops deployed to the Persian Gulf region. |
|
Currently, there is no vaccine for the Marburg virus, a form hemorrhagic fever like Ebola. |
|
The yellow fever mosquito Aedes aegypti is the most common vector of yellow fever and dengue fever flaviviruses. |
|
These mosquitoes transmit yellow fever virus and dengue virus, which can cause dengue hemorrhagic fever. |
|
Mosquitoes, poisonous snakes and tropical diseases such as yellow fever and typhoid caused many to succumb. |
|
In May 2004 I was part of an international team that responded to an outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in South Sudan. |
|
Outbreaks of cholera, malaria, typhoid, leishmaniasis, meningitis, and haemorrhagic fever also recorded. |
|
Twelve hundred cases of dengue and 101 cases of dengue haemorrhagic fever have been confirmed. |
|
Then the fever begins to seize them, and they keep their beds two days, very seldom three. |
|
But vaccination against deadly diseases such as yellow fever and malaria is essential. |
|
Cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis, tachycardia, pleuritic pain, cyanosis and fever are common. |
|
Rain pits can lead to spreading of diseases such as dengue fever and malaria. |
|
By the time Shane stepped through the ropes, the crowd, eagerly anticipating his arrival, had already risen to a fever pitch. |
|
Dengue fever or dengue hemorrhagic fever is a viral disease carried by mosquitoes. |
|
Dengue fever occurs annually in Indonesia, with a peak occurring every five years. |
|
Diseases like malaria, dengue fever and cholera can spread quickly especially in temperatures over 30 degrees. |
|
Health and education facilities are minimal and diseases such as malaria, dengue fever and tuberculosis are common. |
|
|
The aim of disease carrier control is to minimise the transmission of malaria, dengue fever and any other communicable disease spread by insects. |
|
He urged the government to do more prevention work before a serious outbreak of diseases such as dengue fever and Japanese encephalitis occurs. |
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She tried to resist and struggle, but the weakness of the fever prevented her from even being able to free an arm from the blanket. |
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By the time I got home this past Saturday night I had a fever and ached all over as if something evil had infected me. |
|
After childhood bouts with scarlet fever and pneumonia, she decided to become a nurse. |
|
Tension among teeny-boppers is reaching fever pitch as music fans wait impatiently for Gareth to take centre stage at the Party in The Park. |
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Aspirin, acetaminophen or ibuprofen may be included to reduce fever and relieve headache or sore throat pain. |
|
Malnutrition and tropical diseases, such as yellow fever and malaria, are serious problems. |
|
The World Cup fever rages on, with soccer enthusiasts glued to the television for the live telecast of matches and match review programmes. |
|
Call your doctor if your child has a fever for more than 24 hours that doesn't get better with acetaminophen or ibuprofen. |
|
Until my fever broke on the evening of my first full day the nurses would take my temperature and change my ice packs every few hours. |
|
The eruption tends to become bullous and systemic symptoms, including fever and prostration, are present. |
|
Doctors found that the panda was affected by lung fever together with functional prostration on some organs. |
|
Typhoid fever is a serious infection caused by the bacterium Salmonella typhi. |
|
If you're in doubt as to whether your fever is serious enough to warrant a call to your doctor, err on the side of caution. |
|
He suffered for about eighteen months from the quartan fever which is a fever which recurs at approximately 72-hour intervals. |
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There he established a world renowned centre for rheumatic fever and later, when rheumatic fever was conquered, for children and adults with chronic forms of arthritis. |
|
It was like watching a sufferer of cabin fever finally see release. |
|
Fever is the presenting symptom in 10 to 15 percent of patients, and therefore amebic abscess should be considered in patients with a fever of unknown origin. |
|
Once dawn came, she could awaken from an unsatisfying sleep, turn off the light, and feel the kind of physical and mental peace that comes after a fever has broken. |
|
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But if you take this lull in the schedule to do some planning for next spring, you can satisfy everyone's cabin fever with extra early bouquets and baskets. |
|
Like many people, you may experience cabin fever during the winter months. |
|
The Daily Beast's Michael Moynihan heroically ventures into the fever swamp. |
|
With midterm elections being merely a week away here in the United States, my morbid fascination with what the political pundits are saying has reached a fever pitch. |
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He is on the road to recovery from glandular fever and could be back before Christmas if a short run-out in the second team goes well this weekend. |
|
Warm weather makes life harder for hay fever sufferers and for asthmatics. |
|
Certain types of these bacteria are also responsible for distinctive rashes on the skin, including the rashes associated with scarlet fever and toxic shock syndrome. |
|
Biting insects are at best a nuisance, but imagine an individual in a hut, sick with a high fever and beset by swarms of biting insects to add to their torment. |
|
An attack of rheumatic fever may last for six weeks or longer. |
|
With media attention hitting fever pitch, a strangely lupine man called Wolf decides to take up the hunt, interrupting Dusty's incompetent press conference. |
|
If the fever did not kill him, this magical taint surely would! |
|
I remember a time, soon after we moved to the compound, when I was delirious with fever and desperately wanted her by my side. |
|
On one cold winter night, she caught fever and took to her bed. |
|
His optimism led him to compare ending poverty to eradicating scarlet fever and diphtheria. |
|
Mites and ticks which feed on vertebrate hair or blood often carry disease organisms, such as spirochete bacteria, responsible for relapsing fever and Lyme disease. |
|
Yellow Jack or yellow fever is spread by the yellow-fever mosquito. |
|
Not even inland towns were safe from the fever known as yellow jack. |
|
My mother, it should be said, had milk fever and couldn't breastfeed me. |
|
Combined with a shortage of food and medicine these conditions create the potential for epidemics of cholera, malaria, dengue fever and diarrhoea. |
|
Mosquito borne diseases, such as dengue fever and encephalitis, are generally more influenced by ambient conditions than diseases passed directly from human to human. |
|
|
Polio is a stealthy infection, often producing no symptoms or perhaps a slight fever and a sore throat. |
|
Although tender and swollen gums could cause your baby's temperature to be a little higher than normal, teething, as a rule, does not cause high fever or diarrhea. |
|
The most riveting stories so far deal with trivial matters that sound like deleted scenes from a George Costanza fever dream. |
|
He enjoyed a solid reputation for bringing the modern methods of bacteriology to the department after the city's previous and worst episode of typhoid fever a decade earlier. |
|
This multicenter trial initially enrolled 421 children who were one to 24 months of age and had a fever and pyuria or bacteriuria in a catheterized urine specimen. |
|
This indicates abortus fever and brucellosis are synonyms of a single disease name and the term brucellosis has been chosen as the preferred term. |
|
You can catch Q fever by eating or touching contaminated meat. |
|
Similarly, how little time Shostakovich spent on his work elucidates the fever and impatience of his mind. |
|
Give acetaminophen to reduce fever and make the child more comfortable. |
|
Unlike acetaminophen, which is also a pain reliever and fever reducer, acetylsalicylic acid also reduces inflammation caused by various conditions. |
|
Symptoms of influenza differ from the common cold and can consist of fever with chills, fatigue, generalized muscle and body aches, headache, cough and sore throat. |
|
A few of the men died of jungle fever and one guy was killed by lightning. |
|
With millions of Indians waiting with bated breath over the decision of the men in blue for the mini World Cup, cricket fever has only just begun. |
|
The election fever is sweeping through Zambia and it is not a surprise there is pushing and pulling amongst politicians both in the ruling party and the opposition camps. |
|
In a fever of modernisation 30 years ago, this long weekend's place in the calendar was in any case divorced from Whitsun, which was the original excuse. |
|
The town has certainly been gripped by Cup fever with long queues outside the ticket office yesterday morning and 1000 tickets being sold in the first hour. |
|
Although fever is the most commonly encountered disorder of thermoregulation, hypothermia has played a major role in shaping history and medicine for millennia. |
|
Eight of the students had to be evacuated out of the country when they contracted diseases such as dengue fever and malaria. |
|
Although it has a long history in traditional Chinese medicine as a fever reducer, modern science has largely revealed the supplement's role in enhancing brain function. |
|
For scarlet fever patients were kept in hospital for six weeks and only allowed to speak to visitors through the window for fear of the contagion. |
|
|
Group A streptococcal infections that cause scarlet fever are contagious. |
|
They can be sapped of war fever by the diplomatic courage and genius displayed by Kissinger and Nixon four decades ago. |
|
They ambulanced him fast yesterday out of the nursing home with a serious infection, high fever and blood pressure into the hospital's intensive care unit. |
|
Named after its white-striped legs, the tiger mosquito is a vicious biter that transmits tropical viruses including dengue fever, yellow fever and forms of encephalitis. |
|
In the creation of the Lassa fever test strips, they had also made a similar, but separate, Ebola test. |
|
The association of maternal fever with epidural analgesia is well known. |
|
Perhaps he was just caught up in the general gold fever that recurred at various times all through the 19th century and climaxed in the 96-98 rush. |
|
By the 1850s, once the first flush of gold fever was over, a number of the immigrants turned to grape-growing and wine-making as a more reliable source of income. |
|
This is very important because aspirin may cause a serious illness called Reye's syndrome in children with fever caused by a virus infection, especially flu or chickenpox. |
|
In addition to causing infections, streptococci give rise, by an autoimmune process, to the serious conditions of rheumatic fever and kidney inflammation. |
|
Prevention of acute rheumatic fever is no longer the main reason to treat patients with penicillin in western Europe, because of the low incidence of this complication. |
|
They think me and Rory have gotten cabin fever and been on set too long, just talking in this random language. |
|
Nobody died from Ebola, or ISIS or Honduran children, unless it was in a goofball-induced, Louie Gohmert fever dream. |
|
The end results were anything but pleasant for Niko who spent a week after the incident in the hospital ward sick with fever and poison from snakes bite. |
|
Along with the fever came the growing perception that the Democratic Party has been unalterably changed, regardless of the identity of the eventual nominee. |
|
But with ore prices up nearly 50 percent in value over the last 12 months, gold fever has swept the rainforest again. |
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However, a series of crises in farming including BSE, salmonella, swine fever and now foot and mouth, have resulted in millions of animals being destroyed. |
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World Cup fever in Argentina fizzled out into muted silence as England claimed victory in the latest chapter of a fierce soccer rivalry stretching back decades. |
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People are most at risk from hay fever when the pollen count is high. |
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Severe belly pains, a headache, and fever were the only conclusions Breman could draw. |
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Ragweed hay fever has a short, punctuated, and punctual season. |
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The only thing more terrifying than the spread of Ebola is when the hemorrhagic fever spreads to pregnant women. |
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Whereas diarrhea and fever are common toxicities associated with high-dose chemotherapy, it is likely that many cases of typhlitis go unrecognized. |
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In China, diseases such as cholera, typhoid, and scarlet fever have been all but eliminated by Western medicines and preventive efforts, such as vaccination. |
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The disease causes fever and large blisters in the mouth, on the teats and between the hooves, making it difficult for the animal to eat, drink and walk. |
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Group A streptococci also produce toxins that can cause circulatory collapse in streptococcal toxic shock syndrome or fever and a rash in scarlet fever. |
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Hay fever symptoms are likely to be worse if the pollen count is high. |
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Other exclusion criteria were a diagnosis of chronic suppurative otitis media or otitis with effusion, and otoscopic appearance consistent with crying or fever alone. |
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A celebrity said to have a stomachache or fever probably in fact has a stomachache or a fever. |
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At the age of 28, she caught a tropical fever from her patients and died. |
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Proper nutrition is also required to ensure cows can properly ward infections such as mastitis and prevent metabolic problems such as milk fever and ketosis. |
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Imagine the troopers being forced to retreat into a vacant building and barricading the door because the anger and strength of the mob had reached a fever pitch. |
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Among the more traditional remedies for plague fever were the various organic purgatives, including phlebotomy, diaphoretics, diuretics, emetics, and laxatives. |
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The one with the fever and the rash and the kidney failure that eventually killed her? |
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He could recommend a change of air or of diet, administer a concoction of herbs, purge the patient, or, in the case of fever or threatened fever, bleed him. |
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The effect of the virus became especially acute in Britain when swine fever and restrictions on animal movement meant overstocking and overcrowding. |
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Palatine fever, gaol fever, hospital fever, camp fever, and ship fever are all names applied to typhus, an acute febrile disease transmitted to man by body lice. |
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High fever with chills is typical of pyelonephritis and pneumonia. |
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Symptoms include fever lasting two to three days, sore throat, runny nose, mouth ulcers, rashes on the hands, feet and diaper areas, and vomiting and diarrhea. |
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Parrot fever is a bacterial disease that affects more than 100 species of wild and domestic birds, including parrots, macaws, cockatiels and parakeets. |
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