Cholera, dysentery, tuberculosis, and other new diseases took my mother and my friends in a matter of months. |
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But by now all three were malnourished and suffering from amoebic dysentery. |
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Within weeks of the arrival of the new inmates, epidemics of typhus, dysentery, and tuberculosis were raging out of control. |
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Acute bacillary dysentery is characterized accompanied by fever, abdominal cramps and tenesmus. |
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Mortality during famines was rarely caused solely by starvation but from related diseases like dysentery, typhoid, and typhus. |
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As the tankers dug in, dengue fever, malaria, diarrhea, and dysentery afflicted many of the soldiers. |
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Note in particular the much lower incidence of diseases such as enteric fever and dysentery. |
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Across remote villages, it dispatches so-called barefoot doctors armed with first-aid kits and drugs to combat dysentery. |
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The biggest health problems are tuberculosis, venereal diseases, malaria, trachoma, typhoid fever, and dysentery. |
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Direct inoculation of culture plates at the bedside is the most efficient means of isolating shigella from the dysentery patients. |
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The researchers found that shigella, the bacteria causing dysentery uses a Type III secretion system to inject proteins into human cells. |
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There are no pus cells in the stool, thereby ruling out a bacterial diarrhea like shigella dysentery. |
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The pulp of Baobab fruits has a taste like the cream of tartar and is used to treat fever, dysentery and stomach ailments in some parts of Asia. |
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Sewage can carry cholera, typhoid, hepatitis and dysentery, all of which start with acute diarrhea. |
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Tuberculosis had the highest incidence rate of serious diseases, followed by hepatitis B, dysentery, gonorrhea and syphilis. |
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Many, though not all, cases resulting in debility stemmed from chronic diarrhea or dysentery. |
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The vaccine employed was designed to immunize against cholera, typhoid, paratyphoid, and dysentery. |
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For them, water borne diseases such as diarrhea, dysentery and cholera are a constant threat. |
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The flood victims face the danger of epidemics of cholera, dysentery, malaria and other diseases. |
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Doctors there were seeing many cases of diarrhoeal disease and feared epidemics of dysentery and cholera. |
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You do hear about outbreaks of things like cholera and dysentery as well as malaria. |
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The weather was poor, and Henry's army was short of provisions, exhausted, and badly stricken with dysentery. |
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In 1993 he went to Bosnia as Britain's official war artist, returning home after two weeks when he collapsed with dysentery. |
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Disease was rampant and smallpox, typhus, typhoid and dysentery made death familiar. |
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The children suffered from eye strain, headaches, leg and shoulder pain, malaria, discoloration of hair, rotten teeth and dysentery. |
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In numerous cases, men first diagnosed with malaria or typhoid were later classified with diarrhea or dysentery. |
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Acute dysentery, typhoid fever and acute hepatitis were the next three most frequently reported diseases. |
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In this way, they spread disease, plague, leprosy, typhoid fever, cholera, dysentery, and so on. |
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While the tidal waves wreaked havoc, the death toll from epidemics caused by diseases such as dysentery, cholera and typhoid could be far higher. |
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Although blood in the stool suggests invasive disease, fever is not a sensitive indicator of dysentery. |
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By August eighty-nine men were recorded in the hospital registers with having diarrhea or dysentery. |
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Typhus cases shot through the roof, as did diphtheria, relapsing fever, dysentery, cholera and so on. |
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Diseases such as malaria were endemic, while blackwater fever, dengue fever, dysentery, yaws, and hookworms were a constant scourge. |
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Approximately a third of cases of dysentery were classified amoebic, a third as bacillary and the rest remained undifferentiated. |
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A recent study found that some urban rats were infected with organisms that could cause diseases including diarrhoea and dysentery. |
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The reductions in duration of both non-dysenteric diarrhoea and dysentery were significant. |
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Cholera, typhoid, dysentery, and other illnesses can be contracted from untreated bathing and drinking water. |
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The nematode is clustered with the acellular slime mold, the cellular slime mold, the malaria parasite, and the dysentery amoeba. |
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Indeed, if it weren't for George Pal's dancing dysentery factory, this movie would be one long seminar on skid row economics. |
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Common scourges found in the desert include plague, typhus, malaria, dengue fever, dysentery, cholera, and typhoid. |
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The lack of clean water across the tsunami-hit region has raised the threat of waterborne diseases such as cholera, typhoid, dysentery and hepatitis. |
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In James Clavel's novel, Taiwan, there is a passage where the Chinese sailors use tea in their water bags because they found that it prevented dysentery. |
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If red hot steel is quenched in a hot decoction of mullein that preparation is useful for treating bleeding dysentery as well as increasing urination. |
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She ended up in prison on the island of Saipan where she either was executed or died of dysentery. |
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In the 18th century, German immigrants coming to Pennsylvania boarded ships plagued with typhus, dysentery, smallpox, and scurvy. |
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At last, 17 days after he left his summer palace, His Holiness, seriously ill with dysentery, crossed the Indian border. |
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Most of these lives would be saved by increased use of simple curative interventions, such as antimalarials and antibiotics combating dysentery and pneumonia. |
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Lice, malaria, ringworm, typhoid, and dysentery were rampant. |
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One is able to regard the country as very healthy, despite the regrettable maladies that frequently afflict it in the form of plague, dysentery and small pox. |
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Water-related diseases cause 80 percent of all the world's sicknesses, in the forms of hepatitis A, malaria, diarrhea, dysentery and schistosomiasis. |
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But he was lucky on the score of dysentery, which plagued the troops. |
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To complicate matters, most men suffered from multiple diseases, including dysentery, typhoid, scurvy, and pneumonia or other respiratory ailments. |
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Modern medicine categorizes diarrhea as a symptom of a disease, such as scurvy, typhoid, malaria, and dysentery, or as a symptom of indigestible substances in the intestines. |
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Almost all Egyptian mummies contained parasites which caused amoebic dysentery and bilharzia, and mummies in the New World had whipworm and roundworm eggs. |
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A single LifeStraw can filter up to 700 liters of water and effectively removes most of the micro organisms which spread diarrhoea, dysentery, typhoid and Cholera. |
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Among the diseases resulting from poor sanitation, unclean water and poor waste disposal are dysentery, cholera, typhus fever, typhoid, schistosomiasis and trachoma. |
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He's had this nasty go of dysentery, it's left him really rather weak. |
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This provision is extended to enteric fever, dysentery, diphtheria, scarlet fever, acute inflammation of the throat, gastroenteritis, and undulant fever. |
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I later find out it's hepatitis A combined with amoebic dysentery. |
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They found that dysentery and jaundice, probably resulting from hepatitis A, are prevalent, and many prisoners complained of abdominal and respiratory problems. |
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As municipal water and sewer systems replaced backyard wells, cesspools, and privies, outbreaks of cholera, typhoid fever, dysentery, malaria, and typhus diminished. |
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In 1917, d' Herelle had discovered a self-propagating filterable substance capable of dissolving dysentery bacilli, later identified as bacteriophage. |
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Mercury, a purgative to clean the system, and quinine, to treat fever, can cause malaria and typhus sufferers to have symptoms that mimic typhoid and dysentery. |
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Lack of clean drinking water introduces risks of bacillary dysentery, cholera, diarrheal disease, typhoid, hepatitis A, and other diseases. |
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She underwent a partial hysterectomy and was admitted to hospital with amoebic dysentery. |
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The Europeans brought new diseases such as smallpox, measles, dysentery, influenza, syphilis and leprosy. |
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James finally died at Theobalds House on 27 March during a violent attack of dysentery, with Buckingham at his bedside. |
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He died of dysentery in January 1596 after unsuccessfully attacking San Juan, Puerto Rico. |
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Al-Safani listed several diseases that are common in Ramadan, including dysentery, typhoid, viral hepatitis A and amoebic dysentery. |
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Flies may carry diseases such as hepatitis A, typhoid, amoebic dysentery and polio. |
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The 10 parasites sicken millions of people every year causing epilepsy, anaphylactic shock, amoebic dysentery and other illnesses. |
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Bacillary dysentery Bacteria travel the fecal-oral route via contaminated water, food, person-to-person contact. |
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As a result incidence of water borne diseases like cholera, typhoid, paratyphoid and dysentery were increasing. |
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Powdered flowers have also been used medically, as an emetic, a decongestant and for the relief of dysentery, in the form of a syrup or infusion. |
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The fact that he had contracted dysentery and marsh fever soon became evident however. |
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Quinoline derivatives have been earlier used for a long time in the treatment of human amoebic dysentery and bacillary dysenteries. |
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On the way, however, he developed dysentery, and his condition deteriorated. |
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Many Aztecs drank dirty, brackish water because of their severe thirst and contracted dysentery. |
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The most common cases among the food borne illnesses related to amoebic dysentery, salmonellosis and typhoid and paratyphoid. |
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It was only an outbreak of dysentery among the Rus' that forced them to depart with their spoils. |
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Sickness and diseases such as, dysentery, malaria, smallpox, and yellow fever used in preparing medicine. |
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Shore duty had the unfortunate effect that Fisher became seriously ill with dysentery and malaria. |
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His colour resulted from dysentery and malaria in middle life, which nearly caused his death. |
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By the time Acre surrendered on 12 July, Philip was severely ill with dysentery, which reduced his zeal. |
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In King's Lynn, John contracted dysentery, which would ultimately prove fatal. |
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Henry II moved in support of Richard, and Henry the Young King died from dysentery at the end of the campaign. |
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Mostly it is because of the microbiological contamination, which can lead to many diseases such as like jaundice, typhoid, and dysentery. |
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In one week 25 were brought out dead, from dysentery and cholera. |
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Already before the Cape, provisions had grown stale, scurvy and dysentery had often set in, and deaths of crews and passengers from disease had begun. |
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And months of siege warfare had brought dysentery to the English camp. |
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Due to the constipation often produced by the consumption of opium, it was one of the most effective treatments for cholera, dysentery, and diarrhea. |
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