G Halwachs-Baumann - Congenital Cytomegalovirus Infection, 2011 - Springer ... The increasing interest in cytomegalicinclusiondisease is also reflected by the amount of papers listed in the scientific database. ... It was also specu- lated that congenital cytomegalicinclusion disease is seen more frequently than congenital toxoplasmosis [26]. ... Related articles
[HTML] from virologyj.comY Huang, Q Tang, M Nguyen, K Dulal… - Virology journal, 2011 - virologyj.com ... population (50-90%) [1]. The fact that the incidence of cytomegalicinclusiondisease (CID) is intimately related to viral burden suggests that the inhibition of viral production by the specific repression of viral gene expression will reduce the occurrence of CID [2]. Understanding ... Related articles - Cached - All 5 versions
M Wittek, L Gürtler… - Sexually Transmitted Infections …, 2011 - books.google.com ... 22.1). For many decades, pathologists called it the cytomegalicinclusion “disease”(CID), although no disease was apparent. Since 1950 it became clear that CID played a role in fetopathy and other diseases of the newborn, especially where premature infants were concerned. ...
MH Siminovich… - Pediatric and Developmental …, 2011 - pedpath.org ... oedema. Intranuclear inclusions may also be seen in infections with the viruses of herpes simplex, varicella-herpes zoster, and cytomegalic (CMV) inclusiondisease. Some of these viruses, such as CMV or herpes virus, frequently cause disease in immunosuppressed patients. ... Related articles - All 2 versions
A Berger, A Reitter, PN Harter… - Journal of clinical …, 2011 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov ... rather high. About 1/10 of vertically infected newborns present or develop severe signs of cytomegalicinclusiondisease (CID), with the classical triad of chorioretinitis, microcephaly and cerebral calcifications. However the most ... All 2 versions