His teeth were too long, his hooves in a bad way and he had septicaemia, a disease caused by toxic micro-organisms in the blood. |
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Most people who get the disease have some symptoms of both meningococcal meningitis and meningococcal septicaemia. |
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The most common forms of the bug were now strain C of the bacterial meningococcal meningitis and its blood poisoning relative, septicaemia. |
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The results of forensic post-mortem tests showed the babies died from septicaemia caused by enterobacter bacteria. |
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He was readmitted to hospital 4 days later, profoundly confused as a result of staphylococcal septicaemia. |
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Clinically these diseases mimic pyogenic bacterial infections, Gram negative septicaemia or cryptic tuberculosis. |
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The toxins produced by many of the bacteria that cause septicaemia can severely damage any of the cells of the body. |
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He had developed erysipelas at the site of a mosquito bite, which resulted in septicaemia and pneumonia. |
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In 1878, he identified the germ that caused blood poisoning and septicaemia. |
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Bacterial septicaemia was quickly ruled out, with the evidence pointing to a toxic or preacute viral cause. |
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We are seeing more and more cases of septicaemia without any meningitis symptoms which makes it hard to diagnose. |
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It may present as a localised infection or involve a single organ or as generalised septicaemia. |
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In patients with superimposed bacterial infection, septicaemia develops and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. |
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The Foundation fights death and disability from meningitis and septicaemia and supports people affected by the diseases. |
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It was particularly distressful for the Carlow No.6 in that he was only getting back in trim following a bout of septicaemia. |
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It said on the certificate that he'd had pneumonia but had died from septicaemia, which is blood poisoning. |
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In the early stages it looks similar to blood poisoning or septicaemia and suspected cases should go to hospital. |
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Four out of the five Indian cases with septicaemia or meningitis had a fatal outcome. |
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The elderly and those recovering from recent operations are particularly affected by pneumonia or septicaemia. |
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In northern Thailand, melioidosis is the most common cause of septicaemia. |
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Both adults and children may have a rash that starts as red or purple spots anywhere on the body, and is a symptom of septicaemia, or blood poisoning. |
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She also contracted the even more lethal associated form of the disease, septicaemia, which causes blood poisoning throughout the body and led to the amputation of her limbs. |
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Her discharge from hospital was delayed by the fact that her toes were gangrenous and, because of blood clotting caused by the septicaemia, she had three epileptic seizures. |
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Or they may come with, or deteriorate by rapidly developing, florid pneumonia or septicaemia with multi-organ failure and die in spite of the usual treatments. |
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Generally, septicaemia leads to blood poisoning as well as lung and heart failure. |
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Ms Cooke died a few days later, of septicaemia, infected pressure sores and multiple organ failure. |
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The septicaemia had developed because his rash had become infected. |
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The type and degree of infections vary widely and include potentially fatal septicaemia and tetanus. |
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He fortunately realised that I might have meningococcal septicaemia and gave me an injection of antibiotics. |
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Since then I have learned that all of these were the classic symptoms of meningococcal septicaemia. |
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For example, a child with the classification VERY SEVERE FEBRILE DISEASE could have meningitis, severe malaria or septicaemia. |
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This classification includes several illnesses such as meningitis, cerebral malaria, and septicaemia. |
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That is partly to fight salmonid rickettsial septicaemia, a deadly infection widespread in Chile for which vaccines are only now being tested. |
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He had a rare form of septicaemia caused by a cat scratch that lasted for nine years. |
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If you suspect septicaemia, get help urgently. |
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Manifestations of listeriosis include but are not limited to bacteremia, septicaemia, meningitis, encephalitis, miscarriage, neonatal disease, premature birth, and stillbirth. |
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Infections with infectious haematopoietic necrosis, infectious salmon anaemia, and viral haemorrhagic septicaemia, when confirmed in farms or zones approved or free, must be notified as primary outbreaks. |
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After four weeks, Scott contracted golden staph, a hospital bug, followed by septicaemia. |
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As the illness progressed with hardly any notice, it turned into septicaemia. |
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After several days of agony, Wollstonecraft died of septicaemia on 10 September. |
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The olive leaf extract exhibits antiviral activity against viral heamorrhagic septicaemia rhabdovirus. |
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Urinary tract infection with septicaemia due to Staphylococcus saprophyticus in a patient with a ureteric calculus. |
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These toxins break down the walls of blood vessels and blood leaks out under the skin to cause the red blotchy rash of meningococcal septicaemia. |
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It is often called septicaemia or blood poisoning. |
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The first is to get the World Health Organisation and others to rethink their advocacy of fluid resuscitation to children with malaria, septicaemia, meningitis and similar diseases. |
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The most likely cause of Cromwell's death was septicaemia following his urinary infection. |
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The parts of Norway referred to in the Annex are recognised as approved continental zone and as approved coastal zone for fish with regard to infectious haematopoietic necrosis and viral haemorrhagic septicaemia. |
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Most die of pneumonia, while some develop fatal meningitis or septicaemia. |
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Group B streptococcus infections, caused by the bacterium streptococcus agalactiae, are the most common cause of meningitis, septicaemia and pneumonia in newborn babies. |
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At this stage if the disease goes unrecognised, the temperature, pulse and respiration are increased and the animal may die from septicaemia and toxaemia. |
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Those who survive can be left with devastating after-effects including loss of hearing, sight, brain damage and, where septicaemia has occurred, loss of limbs. |
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Common symptoms of meningococcal septicaemia include aching limbs, cold hands and feet and a rash which starts like pinprick marks and develops into bruising. |
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