The Canary Database
Yale Occupational and
Environmental Medicine Program
135 College St
Room 366
New Haven, CT, USA
06510-2283
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Am J Trop Med Hyg 1993 Aug;49(2):227-35.
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Field studies on the epidemiology of Venezuelan hemorrhagic fever: implication of the cotton rat Sigmodon alstoni as the probable rodent reservoir.
Tesh RB, Wilson ML, Salas R, De Manzione NM, Tovar D, Ksiazek TG, Peters CJ
Yale Arbovirus Research Unit, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
Article type: Curated - Canary ID: 1835
| Cause and Effect Analysis |
Interspecies susceptibility data |
Shared exposures with humans |
Shared outcomes with humans |
Gene sequence data |
| Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
| Study type |
N |
Routes |
Sampling |
Controls |
Timing |
| cross sectional |
447 |
ingestion, mucocutaneous, inhalation |
exposure |
yes |
concurrent |
| Exposures |
Guanarito virus
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| Outcomes |
Hemorrhagic Fevers, Viral
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| Species |
Didelphis marsupialis Guaira spiny rat Holochilus brasiliensis Human Marmosa robinsoni Rodentia roof rat Sigmodon alstoni
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| Locations |
| Venezuela |
Portuguesa |
La Arenosa (populated place) |
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La Hoyada (populated place) |
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Palmarito (populated place) |
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Pirital (populated place) |
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