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 Translation for 'catarrhal' from English to Hungarian
ADJ   catarrhal | - | -
orvost.
hurutos {adj}
catarrhal
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Translation for 'catarrhal' from English to Hungarian

catarrhal
hurutos {adj}orvost.
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Usage Examples English
  • He showed the opportunities available to GPs for epidemiological observation in two "British Medical Journal" "(BMJ)" articles in 1930, on 'catarrhal jaundice' and in 1933, on Bornholm disease.
  • Middleton had met Marion Streatfield, a nurse when at the war's end having commenced his work with the Sports Control Board, he was admitted to the 10th British Red Cross Hospital in Le Treport, France suffering from catarrhal jaundice.
  • The illness usually starts with mild respiratory symptoms include mild coughing, sneezing, or a runny nose (known as the catarrhal stage).
  • The son of Knyazhnin in a biographic essay about this father wrote that he died of "catarrhal fever".
  • Bovine malignant catarrhal fever usually is fatal in susceptible species like cattle and bison, and any animal that survives will remain infectious for the rest of its life even if it shows no subsequent signs of the disease.

  • However, they are susceptible to malignant catarrhal.
  • The water is outstanding for mineral water drinking cures especially in the case of chronic catarrhal inflammations, acute colitis (enteritis), cholecystitis, inflammation of the pelvis of the kidney, dyspepsia (gastric troubles), pyrosis and gastric ulcer.
  • It has also been suggested that a virus related to Alcelaphine herpesvirus 1 is a passenger virus that, unlike AHV1 itself, does not cause bovine malignant catarrhal fever.
  • Ingrassia approached epidemic responses as a collaboration between healthcare and government officials, and was the first known "health care professional" to propose that a system for monitoring epidemics of contagious catarrhal fevers would aid in early detection and epidemic control.
  • It contains the detailed observational studies of a 1928 epidemic of catarrhal jaundice and a 1929 epidemic of Bornholm disease which were published in the "British Medical Journal" "(BMJ)" in 1930 and 1933 respectively.

  • Infection of "Cochlosoma" species has also been associated with runting and catarrhal enteritis in wild and domestic turkey poults and ducklings1,10.
  • EHDV manifests itself as epizootic hemorrhagic disease (EHD), which has similar symptoms to adenovirus hemorrhagic disease (AHD), “bluetongue” disease, and malignant catarrhal fever.
  • It was mobilized as an active duty naval unit in 1941 to study the epidemiological impact of diseases such as influenza, meningitis, and catarrhal fever, as well as tropical diseases such as malaria on the US Navy during World War II.
  • Millingen, when on the eve of leaving from Florence to visit London, died of a severe catarrhal affection on 1 October 1845.
  • "Alcelaphine gammaherpesvirus 2" (AlHV-2) is a species of "Macavirus" that is believed to be responsible for causing hartebeest infections of malignant catarrhal fever.

  • In June 1900, the young merchant Francesco Paolo Iammarino was diagnosed with catarrhal jaundice, by his doctor, Giuseppe Altobello; despite the treatments, there was no sign of improvement.
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© dict.cc Hungarian-English dictionary 2024
Contains translations by TU Chemnitz and Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (German-English only).
Links to this dictionary or to individual translations are very welcome!