Spanish Flu
Mostrando 1-7 de 7 artigos, teses e dissertações.
-
1. A Influenza espanhola de 1918/1919 na Cidade de Goiás / The "Spanish flu" of 1918/1919 in the City of Goiás
A pesquisa sobre a gripe espanhola em Goiás teve como principal objetivo compreender os impactos e os significados que representou para a população. Buscamos analisar a sintomatologia da doença de gripe espanhola, bem como ressaltar a imprecisão da medicina ao defini-la e caracterizá-la, os múltiplos sintomas diagnosticados e a variedade de tratamento
IBICT - Instituto Brasileiro de Informação em Ciência e Tecnologia. Publicado em: 11/03/2011
-
2. The "Spanish flu" of 1918/1919 in the City of Goiás / A Influenza espanhola de 1918/1919 na Cidade de Goiás
A pesquisa sobre a gripe espanhola em Goiás teve como principal objetivo compreender os impactos e os significados que representou para a população. Buscamos analisar a sintomatologia da doença de gripe espanhola, bem como ressaltar a imprecisão da medicina ao defini-la e caracterizá-la, os múltiplos sintomas diagnosticados e a variedade de tratamento
Publicado em: 2011
-
3. Jornalismo à espanhola: um olhar sobre o noticiÃrio recifense da epidemia de gripe de 1918
A pandemia de gripe espanhola de 1918 atingiu o Recife entre setembro e dezembro daquele ano, provocando mais de 2000 vÃtimas. Nesse perÃodo, a doenÃa transformou-se em manchete em todos os jornais diÃrios da cidade, mas tratada de diferentes maneiras por cada um deles, fato que levantou questionamentos quanto aos elementos que atuaram na constituiÃÃo
Publicado em: 2008
-
4. Characterization of the 1918 “Spanish” influenza virus neuraminidase gene
The “Spanish” influenza pandemic of 1918 was characterized by exceptionally high mortality, especially among young adults. The surface proteins of influenza viruses, hemagglutinin and neuraminidase, play important roles in virulence, host specificity, and the human immune response. The complete coding sequence of hemagglutinin was reported last year. Thi
National Academy of Sciences.
-
5. The haemagglutinin gene, but not the neuraminidase gene, of 'Spanish flu' was a recombinant.
Published analyses of the sequences of three genes from the 1918 Spanish influenza virus have cast doubt on the theory that it came from birds immediately before the pandemic. They showed that the virus was of the H1N1 subtype lineage but more closely related to mammal-infecting strains than any known bird-infecting strain. They provided no evidence that the
-
6. Epidemiological evidence of an early wave of the 1918 influenza pandemic in New York City
The 1918 “Spanish flu” was the fastest spreading and most deadly influenza pandemic in recorded history. Hypotheses of its origin have been based on a limited collection of case and outbreak reports from before its recognized European emergence in the summer of 1918. These anecdotal accounts, however, remain insufficient for determining the early diffusi
National Academy of Sciences.
-
7. Spanish Flu and Early 20th-Century Expansion of a Coronary Heart Disease–Prone Subpopulation
According to Stephen Jay Gould, “we have a strong preference for seeing trends as entities moving somewhere.” However, trends may instead be the product of relative expansions and contractions of different subpopulations constituting the system. Variation in attributes of coronary heart disease cases during the decline in coronary heart disease mortality