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Tularemia
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Tularemia
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Defense Department helps secure former Soviet 'antiplague' sites 24 Nov 2005
Located in regions where many dangerous diseases such as anthrax, bubonic plague and tularemia are endemic, or through which exotic diseases might spread, some ...
- GovExec.com
University leads microscopic battle vs. bioweapons Nov 18, 2005
The bacteria causes the disease tularemia, which is transmitted by rodents and acts like a severe form of the flu. It is fatal 30 percent of the time. ...
- Scripps Howard News Service
War On Terror Meets War On Cancer Nov 22, 2005
But for live bioweapons spread through the air in an aerosol mist -- bacteria that cause plague, tularemia or Q fever, for example -- the difference in isotope ...
- Science Daily (press release)
Bioterror 'not if, but when' Nov 21, 2005
Interpol has listed six lethal "Category A" pathogens that could be used: smallpox, anthrax, tularemia, botulism, plague and viruses such as Ebola. ...
- News24,
Pets come to the rescue Nov 20, 2005
The officials had detected a bacterium in the air that causes tularemia, a highly infectious disease that triggers severe respiratory illnesses and can be fatal ...
- Los Angeles Times,
Regulations readied for research labs Nov 15, 2005
The proposed rules emerge 10 months after public disclosure that three Boston University scientists had fallen ill while working with tularemia, a lethal ...
- Boston Globe,
Zoonotic diseases continue to increase Nov 20, 2005
Make sure the area is well ventilated and wear gloves. Tularemia (�rabbit fever�) is a zoonotic disease, carried by wild rabbits and other rodents. ...
- EastOregonian.info (subscription),
Bill would order probe of 1962-1974 toxic exposure Nov 16, 2005
...chemicals or germs. At times, however, the tests involved live nerve agents, such as VX nerve gas and the germ tularemia. Some service ...
- ArmyTimes.com,
Terror germ detected in Santa Clara County, but threat downplayed Nov 2, 2005
On Sunday morning, an air monitoring station picked up a low reading for the presence of the tularemia bacteria, but four follow-up tests were negative ...
- San Jose Mercury News,
Bay Area Extra Nov 3, 2005
On Sunday morning, an air monitoring station in an undisclosed location picked up a low reading for the presence of the tularemia bacteria, but follow-up tests ...
- San Jose Mercury News,
UNM leading effort on rabbit fever vaccine Oct 24, 2005
Tularemia, also called rabbit fever, is transmitted by rodents and acts like a severe form of the flu. It's fatal 30 percent of the time. ...
- Seattle Post Intelligencer
BACTERIA ON CDC'S BIOTERRORISM LIST DETECTED IN SJ Oct 31, 2005
One of the Centers for Disease Control's top five biological terrorism agents, the tularemia bacteria, has been detected in air monitors in San Jose but public ...
- CBS 5,
Proposal is aired to tighten rules for research labs Nov 16, 2005
...drafted by a panel of safety specialists formed after public disclosure that three Boston University scientists had fallen ill with tularemia while researching ...
- Boston Globe,
UTSA opens new bioterrorism lab Nov 14, 2005
There, researchers will study such diseases as anthrax, tularemia, cholera, lyme disease, desert valley fever and other parasitic and fungal diseases. ...
- KLTV,
UTSA opens new bioterrorism lab Nov 14, 2005
...$10.6 million Margaret Batts Tobin Laboratory Building will provide a 22,000-square-foot facility to study such diseases as anthrax, tularemia, cholera, lyme ...
- Denton Record Chronicle (subscription),
Hennigan chides Mayor Menino Oct 24, 2005
...position, but the only Level 4 disease studied at that lab is Herpes B. The proposed lab in Boston would house toxic bacteria such as tularemia, which infected ...
- Daily Free Press (subscription),
Applied Biosystems Launches Global Infectious Disease Surveillance ... Nov 8, 2005
...to help protect the public from emerging man-made and natural infectious disease threats, including avian influenza, anthrax, tularemia, plague, and other ...
- TMCnet
UTSA opens new biotech lab Nov 14, 2005
...of Health, drug companies and other partners in the public, educational and private sectors, UTSA researchers will study anthrax, tularemia, cholera, Lyme ...
- San Antonio Express (subscription),
Informed Consent and Ethical Issues in Military Medical Research Nov 13, 2005
...bearing arms, the SDAs participated in studies directed at developing and testing vaccines and therapeutic drugs against Q fever, tularemia, various viral ...
- AEM (subscription)
MSU center to tackle bioterrorism Oct 24, 2005
The EPA identified known threats such as anthrax, smallpox, botulism, plague, viral hemorrhagic fever and tularemia that needed the additional study. ...
- DetNews.com,
Michigan State is site of new bioterrorism center Oct 25, 2005
The EPA has identified several threats as needing additional study; they include anthrax, smallpox, botulism, plague, viral hemorrhagic fever and tularemia. ...
- Detroit Free Press,
MSU tapped for bioterrorism research Oct 24, 2005
Also to be studied are two potential terrorist weapons, anthrax and tularemia, also known as rabbit fever. Those organisms could be spread through the air. ...
- MLive.com,
Brooks City-Base entomologists demonstrate pioneering techniques Nov 3, 2005
...wiped out half the European population during the Middle Ages; the mosquito-born yellow fever and dengue hemorrhagic fever; anthrax; and tularemia, the tick ...
- Blackanthem.com,
Diseases plague wildlife, make the news Oct 30, 2005
Some diseases of the past are still around but have been pushed out of headlines - the several tick-caused ailments and tularemia, better known in Arkansas as ...
- Arkansas News,
Anthrax drug could be dangerous Oct 27, 2005
Sensors find traces of tularemia in DC (October 2, 2005) -- Investigators are trying to determine if a bacterium that set off sensors during last week's anti ...
- Science Daily (press release)
CDC hopes new site will allow more research, boost morale Oct 30, 2005
...the agency has several specialty laboratories across the country, such as the one in Fort Collins, Colo., that studies West Nile virus, tularemia, plague and ...
- Dallas Morning News (subscription),
Cyclical Population Explosion of Cotton Rats Causes Concern Oct 25, 2005
...in, he said. Being a true rodent, the rats are susceptible to plague and tularemia, and have been linked to hantavirus. But Karen ...
- AgNews,
Liberally salted: Demon bugs Oct 26, 2005
...evacuation would be necessary if there was some kind of biological or radioactivity attack — something like a release of anthrax, tularemia, or radioactivity ...
- Waldo Village Soup,
Sensors find traces of tularemia in DC 03 Oct 2005
Tens of thousands protest war in capitol (September 24, 2005) -- Tens of thousands of opponents of the war in Iraq traveled to Washington for a massive ...
- Science Daily (press release)
Deadly bacteria detected during anti-war march 03 Oct 2005
...that biological agent monitors on the National Mall, an esplanade in downtown Washington, gave positive readings for a small amount of tularemia on September ...
- Gulf Times
Hospital technician treated after lab spill 03 Oct 2005
Last year, three Boston University researchers were exposed in a laboratory to a potentially lethal bacterium called tularemia. ...
- Boston Globe
Airborne Bacteria May Have Been In Air Over DC, CDC Says Sep 30, 2005
Control and Prevention (CDC) notified the states of Maryland and Virginia and the District of Columbia Friday that an airborne form of Tularemia bacterium was ...
- WTKR Your NewsChannel 3
Tularemia in Russia - US Pensioner Strikes back Sep 7, 2005
...resident of the State of New Jersey) has suddenly made a supposition that the recent outbreak of the disease known by the name of rabbit-fever (tularemia) in a ...
- PHXNews
Tularemia Outbreak in Russia-443 Cases-Origin Unknown Sep 1, 2005
The ProMed site carried a report this morning concerning a Tularemia outbreak in Russia –updated to 08/29/05. The ProMed heading ...
- PHXNews
Tularemia Outbreak in Russia May Have Been Naturally Caused Sep 5, 2005
In researching Tularemia “episodes� a few days ago, I came upon an outbreak in Sweden in 2003 that involved well over 500 cases, and that took place in ...
- PHXNews
UTSA gets grant to study tularemia Aug 31, 2005
SAN ANTONIO - The University of Texas at San Antonio has received a $6.4 million grant to research tularemia, a potential bioweapon, the university said Tuesday ...
- Bryan College Station Eagle
Over thirty suspected tularemia cases reported in Sverdlovsk Aug 31, 2005
More than thirty residents of the villages of Volyny and Staroutkinsk in the Sverdlovsk region have been hospitalized with suspected tularemia, the Federal ...
- Interfax Russia
New labs wage war on animal diseases Oct 2, 2005
Bio-safety Level 2" for testing "live agents that may cause disease in man" and "Bio-safety Level 3" for diseases like anthrax, rabies, tularemia and other ...
- DesMoinesRegister.com
Rabbit fever a potential bioterror threat Sep 21, 2005
That quest has turned San Antonio, Texas, into a major location for the study of tularemia, a disease carried by several small mammals that national defense ...
- Times Herald-Record
Mordovia steps up anti-hepatitis precautions Sep 30, 2005
...are closely watching marketplaces, shops and ponds and taking measures against rodents – the carriers of hemorrhagic fever, leptospirosis and tularemia. ...
- ITAR-TASS
County health officials take note of increase in rare disease Sep 2, 2005
Tularemia, also called "rabbit fever," is caused by a naturally occurring bacteria. The state averages between two and four cases a year. From May 28 to Aug. ...
- Longview Daily News
Love for pets can be life-threatening Sep 22, 2005
Bird flu in Russia is almost over, but still epidemiologists started registering outbreaks of another dangerous disease tularemia. ...
- Pravda
Animals here need help, too Sep 17, 2005
No, I'm not talking about an extreme passion for bunnies. Last month in Corvallis, we saw proof of tularemia, also called rabbit fever, in a dead squirrel. ...
- Albany Democrat Herald
Mayoral candidates face off Sep 29, 2005
How can you trust Tom Menino to give you an evacuation plan when you can not trust Tom Menino to tell you about a tularemia outbreak that BU had that he did ...
- Daily Free Press (subscription)
Missing Plague Mice Point Up Concerns About Lab Security Sep 19, 2005
...with pathogens. During the past year, tularemia and anthrax -- both dangerous bacteria -- have been accidentally released. In April ...
- Newhouse News Service (NNS)
Vineyard can't shake stubborn illness Aug 30, 2005
Martha's Vineyard this summer has recorded more cases of tularemia than any year since 2000, deepening the mystery of why a bacterial infection that ...
- Boston Globe
GMU receives grant for lab Sep 11, 2005
Culture Collection in Manassas has served as a repository for cell lines, microorganisms and other biological materials, including tularemia -- a potentially ...
- Richmond Times Dispatch
Vineyard Epidemic: Lyme Disease on the Rise: Health Experts Track ... Sep 15, 2005
Already, the DPH has confirmed eight cases of tularemia on the Island this year and is investigating four more. While rare in other ...
- Martha's Vineyard Gazette
Medical data going online Sep 17, 2005
Delaware officials have conducted training exercises to gauge their ability to respond to two listed bioterrorist threats, anthrax and tularemia, also known as ...
- Newszap Delaware
Doubts remain about government efforts to fight bioterror Sep 21, 2005
...cause widespread havoc. They include smallpox, botulism, plague, cholera, the Ebola virus, tularemia and shigella. Terrorists have ...
- Middle East North Africa Financial Network
Jamey Hecht, PhD Sep 23, 2005
Designated “Category A� pathogens, these include bacterial diseases like plague, anthrax, smallpox, and tularemia, and the major viral hemorrhagic fevers ...
- From the Wilderness
UTSA lands $6.4 million grant to fight bioterrorism Aug 30, 2005
The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) won a five-year, $6.4 million federal research grant to study tularemia, an illness caused by scratches or bites ...
- San Antonio Business Journal
A new virulent disease attacks the Russians Aug 31, 2005
...steam. New cases of tularemia are registered there, Kazinform cites RBK. ... river. Tularemia epidemic is on in Nizhegorodskaya oblast. ...
- Kazinform
Tiny Avalanche Photodiodes Target Bioterrorism Agents Sep 14, 2005
...attacks in the United States in 2001 the threat of a larger and more deadly bioterrorism attack -- perhaps from smallpox, plague or tularemia -- became very ...
- Science Daily (press release)
George Mason University Receives $25 Million Federal Award For ... Sep 8, 2005
Research will focus on diseases considered by the US government to be potential bioterror threats, such as anthrax, tularemia and plague, as well as on ...
- ArriveNet (press release)
GMU gets $25 million for biocontainment lab Sep 8, 2005
...square foot facility will focus research on diseases considered by the government to be potential bioterror threats, including anthrax, tularemia and plague. ...
- Washington Business Journal
$6.4 million grant goes to UT-San Antonio Aug 30, 2005
SAN ANTONIO The University of Texas at San Antonio has received a six-point-four (m) million dollar grant to research tularemia, a potential bioweapon. ...
- KLTV
GMU gets $25 million grant Sep 9, 2005
4 agents, such as Ebola and small pox, they will test vaccines and therapeutic treatments for biological airborne agents such as Anthrax, tularemia and HIV, in ...
- Potomac News (subscription)
Source: Protein Potential LLC Sep 8, 2005
They have initiated internal programs to produce vaccines for SARS, dengue fever, tularemia, plague, and Plasmodium vivax malaria. ...
- Yahoo! News (press release)
Post-9/11 life is more startling, suspicious Sep 11, 2005
They are botulism, hemorrhagic fevers including ebola and pneumonic plague, anthrax, smallpox, and the less deadly tularemia that's still dangerous because it ...
- The Free Lance-Star
Regulating High Security Bio-Terror Research Sep 2, 2005
...constructing a laboratory that would conduct research on some of the most deadly biological agents known to humanity—including anthrax and tularemia—in a ...
- Z Magazine (subscription)
NY needs a top-level bioterrorism lab - now Aug 30, 2005
...it after it was discovered in January that three researchers at Boston University had contaminated themselves with a disease called tularemia, also known as ...
- Newsday
US, Ukraine Sign Agreement to Counter Bioterrorism Threat Aug 30, 2005
The station does research on pathogens that cause diseases such as anthrax, tularemia, brucellosis, listeriosis, diphtheria, cholera and typhoid. ...
- NewsBlaze
CDC's new digs encourage security Aug 30, 2005
...the agency has several specialty laboratories across the country, such as the one in Fort Collins, Colo., that studies West Nile virus, tularemia, plague and ...
- Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
Wyoming outdoors: Bird, small game seasons open today in Wyoming Sep 1, 2005
...year. The threat of the disease tularemia, which can be found in rabbits, is greatly diminished after the first hard frost. According ...
- Billings Gazette
Landscaper Contracts Tularemia in Case Considered UnusualJul 7, 2005
The Vineyard's first tularemia case of the year, a 50-year-old male landscaper, may have contracted the potentially fatal disease after handling a dead rabbit ...
- Martha's Vineyard Gazette
Shelby girl recovers after bout with rare tick-borne illnessJul 27, 2005
There, blood tests were done and the results pointed to tularemia. ... Varman said tularemia, also known as rabbit fever, is a rare infection. ...
- Columbus Telegram
Colorado DailyJul 21, 2005
Boulder County officials announced that a squirrel submitted for testing on July 14 has been confirmed positive for tularemia, or "Rabbit Fever.". ...
- Colorado Daily
Homeland Security Lists Toxic ThreatsJul 28, 2005
The Homeland Security Department almost has finished assessing whether three more threats -- plague, tularemia and chemical nerve agents -- should go on the ...
- Los Angeles Times
Neb. Toddler Recovering From Rabbit FeverJul 28, 2005
SHELBY, Neb. -- A toddler is recovering from a rare case of tularemia, commonly known as rabbit fever, which she likely contracted through a tick bite. ...
- Newsday
Zoo timelineJul 27, 2005
...zoo's new director. September 2003 -- A young female orangutan dies from tularemia, a disease carried by rabbits. Poor exhibit design ...
- Topeka Capital Journal (subscription)
Zoo reworks imageJul 25, 2005
...causes in April 2003. Batu, a young female, died in September 2003 from tularemia, a disease carried by rabbits. Wild rabbits were ...
- Topeka Capital Journal (subscription)
Cerus Corporation Announces Publication in Nature Medicine; Killed ...Jul 25, 2005
Second, KBMA vaccines may have a role in protection from bioterror agents such as anthrax, tularemia and bubonic plague, where a live bacterial vaccine would ...
- PharmaLive.com
Tick, tock ... ouchJul 6, 2005
Bites from infected ticks spread diseases such as Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, Tularemia Babesiosis, Human Granulocyctic Ehrlichiosis (HGE), and most often ...
- Tewksbury Advocate
$1.8 million is awarded for researchJul 20, 2005
Karl Klose, a UTSA microbiologist, was awarded $1.4 million to continue his studies of tularemia, a bacterial disease that national security experts say could ...
- San Antonio Express (subscription)
Experts gather to discuss flu, other biothreatsJul 18, 2005
Other potential threats include smallpox, anthrax, bubonic plague, botulism, tularemia, equine encephalitis, and viral hemorraghic fevers such as those caused ...
- Access North Georgia
Log in Register NowJul 19, 2005
Inc.) is focused on the research and development of a new generation of vaccines and immunotherapeutics to battle anthrax, plague, smallpox and tularemia. ...
- Genetic Engineering News
Skunk Population Sees Drop; Wildlife Experts Debate CauseJun 30, 2005
..."It could be a tick-borne illness like babesiosis or tularemia or toxoplasmosis. They gave me a list a mile long of the possibilities," she said. ...
- Martha's Vineyard Gazette
Report says zoo is 'profoundly underfunded'Jul 20, 2005
Mosack said one deficiency involving a lattice enabled rabbits to get into an exhibit where an orangutan subsequently died from tularemia, also known as rabbit ...
- Topeka Capital Journal (subscription)
Alarming Summer EncountersJul 15, 2005
...which carry Lyme disease, human babesiosis and human granulocytic erlichiosis), dog ticks (some of which carry Rocky Mountain spotted fever, tularemia and may ...
- Town Times
City recruits terrorism response volunteersJul 19, 2005
...attack. An incident could be one involving biological agents such as smallpox, anthrax, botulism or tularemia, for example,. Emergency ...
- Amarillo.com (Subscription)
State issues warning on Lyme disease riskJul 3, 2005
The Rocky Mountain tick also can transmit that disease, as well as ehrlichiosis and tularemia, bacterial diseases that can be fatal. ...
- Chicago Tribune
Roxbury, South End residents file bias complaint on BU labJul 12, 2005
The lab was heavily scrutinized earlier this year when it was discovered that scientists in another BU lab had accidentally exposed themselves to tularemia. ...
- Boston Globe
Specialists warn: It's high time for ticksJul 4, 2005
...before. The other main type of tick, the dog tick, is believed to be linked to tularemia and Rocky Mountain spotted fever. Deer ...
- Boston Globe
More ticks mean more risks for people and petsJul 11, 2005
Ticks can transmit a variety of diseases in the United States, including Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, ehrliciosis, tularemia and babesiosis ...
- Gloucester Daily Times
Global Security NewswireJul 12, 2005
...devices. Vitko said assessments of plague, tularemia, radiological devices and nerve agents would be completed by year’s end. ...
- All Hands Network
Documentary Outlines Risks, Tips for Bio-terrorism ThreatJul 7, 2005
Back, Taking on Bioterrorism in Utah", host Jane Clayson also outlines the top threats: small pox, anthrax, botulism, pneumonic plague, tularemia, and a group ...
- KSL-TV
BIOLOGICAL TERRORISM-IJul 13, 2005
Mycotoxins, Plague, Q Fever, Ricin, Rift Valley Fever, Saxitoxin, Smallpox, Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B, Trichothecene Mycotoxins, Tularemia and Venezuelan ...
- The Statesman
Do some research to protect against tick-borne diseasesJul 1, 2005
...one of 11 different diseases spread by ticks in the US Michigan currently has 3 tick-borne diseases: Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever and tularemia. ...
- DetNews.com
The dangers of and answers to rodents in the home and gardenJul 1, 2005
Ground squirrels, which are vectors (they can transmit plague and tularemia to humans), also girdle trees when they aren't eating grains, fruits and nuts. ...
- Victorville Daily Press
US struggles for drugs to counter biological threatsJul 11, 2005
...building stockpiles of smallpox vaccine and said that "major strides" have been made toward building antibiotic reserves against anthrax, plague and tularemia. ...
- Pittsburgh Post Gazette
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