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Title: |
Congenital Rubella |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Congenital rubella lesions over abdomen/trunk
Congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) can occur in a developing fetus of a pregnant woman who has contracted rubella during her first trimester. If infection occurs 0–28 days before conception, there is a 43% chance the infant will be affected. If the infection occurs 0–12 weeks after conception, there is a 51% chance the infant will be affected.
If the infection occurs 13–26 weeks after conception there is a 23% chance the infant will be affected by the disease. Infants are not generally affected if rubella is contracted during the third trimester, or 26–40 weeks after conception. Problems rarely occur when rubella is contracted by the mother after 20 weeks of gestation and continues to disseminate the virus after birth. |
Keywords: |
New born, Viral infection, mental retardation, RNA Virus Infections, eye abnormalities, deafness, congenital |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |
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show more |
Title: |
Congenital Rubella |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Congenital rubella - lesions over feet
Congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) can occur in a developing fetus of a pregnant woman who has contracted rubella during her first trimester. If infection occurs 0–28 days before conception, there is a 43% chance the infant will be affected. If the infection occurs 0–12 weeks after conception, there is a 51% chance the infant will be affected.
If the infection occurs 13–26 weeks after conception there is a 23% chance the infant will be affected by the disease. Infants are not generally affected if rubella is contracted during the third trimester, or 26–40 weeks after conception. Problems rarely occur when rubella is contracted by the mother after 20 weeks of gestation and continues to disseminate the virus after birth. |
Keywords: |
RNA Virus Infections, deafness, mental retardation, Viral infection, New born, eye abnormalities, congenital |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |
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show more |
Title: |
Condyloma Accuminata |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Condyloma accuminata over the scrotum, multiple whitish papules
Genital warts (or condylomata acuminata, venereal warts, anal warts and anogenital warts) are symptoms of a highly contagious sexually transmitted disease caused by some sub-types of human papillomavirus (HPV). It is spread through direct skin-to-skin contact during oral, genital, or anal sex with an infected partner. Warts are the most easily recognized symptom of genital HPV infection, and types 6 and 11 are responsible for 90% of genital warts cases. |
Keywords: |
Condylomata Acuminata, sexually transmitted disease, Genital wart |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |
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Title: |
Measles |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Koplik spots over buccal mucosa in measles
Measles is an infection caused by a virus, which causes an illness displaying a characteristic skin rash known as an exanthem. Measles is also sometimes called rubeola, 5-day measles, or hard measles. |
Keywords: |
virus, skin rash, Measles, RNA Virus Infections, infectious disease, Contagious |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |
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Title: |
Varicella |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Varicella - vesicle on an erythematous base over soft palate
An acute, highly contagious, viral disease, with mild constitutional symptoms and a maculopapular vesicular skin eruption; it is a common childhood disease and is rarely severe, but it can be accompanied by severe symptoms in infants and adults. It is usually spread by either contact with blisters or droplet infection, and the average incubation period is 10 to 16 days. The period of contagion lasts about two weeks, beginning two days before the rash appears. The causative virus is human herpesvirus 3 (formerly known as varicella-zoster virus). The same virus also causes herpes zoster (shingles), with the differences in the two diseases probably reflecting differences in the response to the virus. Called also varicella. |
Keywords: |
varicella, DNA Virus Infections, Chicken pox, vesicular skin eruption, viral disease, Chickenpox |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |
-
show more |
Title: |
Measles |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Measles - red eyes, triad of cough, conjuctivitis and coryza
Measles is an infection caused by a virus, which causes an illness displaying a characteristic skin rash known as an exanthem. Measles is also sometimes called rubeola, 5-day measles, or hard measles. |
Keywords: |
virus, Contagious, skin rash, Measles, infectious disease, RNA Virus Infections |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |
-
show more |
Title: |
Measles |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Measles - congestion of the palate
Measles is an infection caused by a virus, which causes an illness displaying a characteristic skin rash known as an exanthem. Measles is also sometimes called rubeola, 5-day measles, or hard measles. |
Keywords: |
RNA Virus Infections, Measles, virus, Contagious, infectious disease, skin rash |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |
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show more |
Title: |
Mollascum Contagiosum |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Molluscum contagiosum over adult axilla
A genus in the family Poxviridae; causes localized wartlike skin lesions. |
Keywords: |
DNA Virus Infections, virus, lesions, Skin disease, warts |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |
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show more |
Title: |
Molluscum Contagiosum |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Mollascum contagiosum- viral skin infection causing raised, pearl-like papules or nodules on the skin |
Keywords: |
virus, warts, Skin disease, lesions, DNA Virus Infections |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |
-
show more |
Title: |
Congenital Rubella |
Depositor: |
batchuser@i-human.com |
Creator: |
Dr. P.N. Girish, MBBS, MD, DDV, DNB
AJ Institute of Medical Science |
Congenital rubella - blueberry muffin lesions over face
Congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) can occur in a developing fetus of a pregnant woman who has contracted rubella during her first trimester. If infection occurs 0–28 days before conception, there is a 43% chance the infant will be affected. If the infection occurs 0–12 weeks after conception, there is a 51% chance the infant will be affected.
If the infection occurs 13–26 weeks after conception there is a 23% chance the infant will be affected by the disease. Infants are not generally affected if rubella is contracted during the third trimester, or 26–40 weeks after conception. Problems rarely occur when rubella is contracted by the mother after 20 weeks of gestation and continues to disseminate the virus after birth. |
Keywords: |
eye abnormalities, Viral infection, RNA Virus Infections, deafness, congenital, New born, mental retardation |
Date Uploaded: |
02/02/2014 |