can anyone give me a schematic diagram of the pathophysiology of dengue fever. (not dengue hemorrhagic fever)?
Q. can anyone give me a schematic diagram of the pathophysiology of dengue fever. (not dengue hemorrhagic fever)?
Asked by xoxo - Wed Aug 27 08:44:45 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. hey i bet you are a student nurse who is working on a case presentation... heheh,... = ) as much as i want to give you that since it is my Case Presentation , DHF actually but DF is just the simple version of it... i think i would not.. because i would really like to help you... it would really be for your benefit to read a book.. = ) i know it's hard to find sources. i experienced that and felt helpless... look into tropical diseases (not on plain medical surgical books or books on pathophysiology only) and study how viruses infect. it is the simplest i tell you... = ) anywayz, really to give you a jumpstart just go back to your concepts on immune and inflam processes. it's all there. the functions of macrophages, inteleukins, and all… [cont.]
Answered by franceRN'08 - Wed Aug 27 09:03:12 2008
Q. can anyone give me a schematic diagram of the pathophysiology of dengue fever. (not dengue hemorrhagic fever)?
Asked by xoxo - Wed Aug 27 08:44:45 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. hey i bet you are a student nurse who is working on a case presentation... heheh,... = ) as much as i want to give you that since it is my Case Presentation , DHF actually but DF is just the simple version of it... i think i would not.. because i would really like to help you... it would really be for your benefit to read a book.. = ) i know it's hard to find sources. i experienced that and felt helpless... look into tropical diseases (not on plain medical surgical books or books on pathophysiology only) and study how viruses infect. it is the simplest i tell you... = ) anywayz, really to give you a jumpstart just go back to your concepts on immune and inflam processes. it's all there. the functions of macrophages, inteleukins, and all… [cont.]
Answered by franceRN'08 - Wed Aug 27 09:03:12 2008
the pathophysiology of dengue hemorrhagic fever?
Q. the pathophysiology of dengue hemorrhagic fever?
Asked by peewee h - Thu Aug 28 12:05:41 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. the pathophysiology of dengue hemorrhagic fever?
Asked by peewee h - Thu Aug 28 12:05:41 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
pathophysiology of dengue?
Q. please please help! what's the pathophysiology of dengue hemorrhagic fever?
Asked by rei - Mon Aug 7 09:21:32 2006 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The principal symptoms of dengue are high fever, severe headache, backache, joint pains, nausea and vomiting, eye pain, and rash. Generally, younger children have a milder illness than older children and adults. Dengue hemorrhagic fever is characterized by a fever that lasts from 2 to 7 days, with general signs and symptoms that could occur with many other illnesses (e.g., nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and headache). This stage is followed by hemorrhagic manifestations, tendency to bruise easily or other types of skin hemorrhages, bleeding nose or gums, and possibly internal bleeding. The smallest blood vessels (capillaries) become excessively permeable ( leaky ), allowing the fluid component to escape from the blood vessels. This may… [cont.]
Answered by scott i - Mon Aug 7 09:43:27 2006
Q. please please help! what's the pathophysiology of dengue hemorrhagic fever?
Asked by rei - Mon Aug 7 09:21:32 2006 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The principal symptoms of dengue are high fever, severe headache, backache, joint pains, nausea and vomiting, eye pain, and rash. Generally, younger children have a milder illness than older children and adults. Dengue hemorrhagic fever is characterized by a fever that lasts from 2 to 7 days, with general signs and symptoms that could occur with many other illnesses (e.g., nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and headache). This stage is followed by hemorrhagic manifestations, tendency to bruise easily or other types of skin hemorrhages, bleeding nose or gums, and possibly internal bleeding. The smallest blood vessels (capillaries) become excessively permeable ( leaky ), allowing the fluid component to escape from the blood vessels. This may… [cont.]
Answered by scott i - Mon Aug 7 09:43:27 2006
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