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toni
Joined: 31 Dec 2004 Posts: 1453 Location: aurajoki
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Kale
Joined: 14 Mar 2008 Posts: 66
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Posted: 04.07.2008 03:21 Post subject: |
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Jauts, tuommoisen kun löytää nahkasta niin amputaatio paikallaan?
Onhan se ikävää että noitä tänne leviää. Mutta onhan ne ryssätkin niistä selvinnyt, niin eiköhän mekin. |
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toni
Joined: 31 Dec 2004 Posts: 1453 Location: aurajoki
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Posted: 04.07.2008 11:28 Post subject: |
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jep.
tokko tuohon sentään amputaatiota tarvitaan:)
mutta nämä levinneisyysalueitaan muuttelevat hämähäkkieläimet,hyönteiset ja loiset saattaa tehdä vielä tempun jos toisenkin,varsinkaan jos perimä ei ole joutunut tekemisiin niiden kanssa aiemmin.ja olosuhteet syystä tai toisesta muuttuu äkisti.
tässä toinen mainio juttu:
http://yle.fi/uutiset/ymparisto/oikea/id94510.html
silti tämän siperiapunkin olemassaolo on hyvä tiedostaa,kuten muidenkin eri tauteja levittävien öttiäisten olemassaolo.tällöin ekana prioriteettina laittaa vaivaa ja painoarvoa niiden puremien välttelyyn sekä mahdolliseen hoidattamiseen.
ite odottelen kovasti malarian uutta esiintuloa suomen kamaralle.
siinä tuskin menee montaakaan vuotta.....ja tässä välillä paukkaa taatusti muitakin ilmastonmuutoksen mukana tuomia lieveilmiö öttiäisiäkin.
niin kasvinviljelyyn kuin ihmisten sekä kotieläinten terveyteen liittyen.
niin vinhoja kuin ovatkin,niin mulla nämä ei saa aikaiseks luonnossa liikkumisen välttelyä.suuntaan tai toiseen.elettävä on.luonnosta. |
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toni
Joined: 31 Dec 2004 Posts: 1453 Location: aurajoki
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Posted: 26.10.2011 09:41 Post subject: |
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A new tick-borne disease discovered in Gothenburg
Researchers at the Sahlgrenska Academy, Göteborg University, has discovered a new tick-borne infectious disease. Since the discovery, eight cases described in the world - three of them in the Gothenburg area.
In July 2009, paddled a 77-year-old Western Swedish man kayak when he suffered from acute diarrhea, fever, and blackouts. The man was taken to hospital, and it was discovered that he suffered from fever in addition to blood clots. He was treated with antibiotics and was discharged a few days later with blood-thinning medication. But the man - who were immunocompromised - again fell ill again with fever.
Completely new infectious disease
The following months were forced 77-year-old repeatedly seek emergency care, but despite repeated attempts to find a microbe and repeated courses of antibiotics, the fever recurred. Finally made special tests on the patient's blood when you were looking for bacterial DNA - and it gave teat. The finding was matched against a web-based gene bank and the result was a sensation: the man had suffered a completely new infectious disease in humans, never before described in the world.
Never demonstrated in Sweden
The man's blood was recovered DNA with 100 percent certainty derived from the bacterium Neoehrlichia mikurensis. The bacterium was first identified in Japan in 2004 in rats and ticks but it had never before been detected in Sweden either in ticks, rodents or humans.
Researched case
Christine Wennerås, doctors and researchers at the Department of Infectious Diseases and Division of Hematology at the Sahlgrenska Academy, Göteborg University, has studied the case since it was discovered. Last year she was the first overview of the newly discovered disease in a scientific article, published in the Journal of Clinical Microbiology.
-Since our discovery has the bacteria reported in eight cases worldwide - including three in Gothenburg, says Christine Wennerås.
Causing blood clots
All three cases in Gothenburg have occurred in patients with impaired defense against infections and patients have fallen ill during the summer months, when ticks are most active.
-The nasty with this infectious disease is that it gives rise to blood clots, at least in people with weakened immune systems. This can be life threatening. Luckily, the infection can be treated successfully with antibiotics, said Christine Wennerås:
- If the newly discovered bacterium similar to those we used to know it will probably spread from wild mammals to humans through tick bites, but the spread is likely not from human to human.
Bacterium mikurensis part name derived from the Japanese island of Mikura, where the bacteria first discovered.
Press release from: Sahlgrenska Academy |
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toni
Joined: 31 Dec 2004 Posts: 1453 Location: aurajoki
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