Exotic Viral Diseases: a Global Guide.Stephen A. Berger, Charles H. Calisher, and Jay S. Keystone BC Decker, Inc., Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, 2003 ISBN: 1-55009-209-7 Pages: 252 Price: $29.95 Exotic Viral Diseases: A Global Guide by Berger et al is a small, soft-cover, 252-page handbook organized by disease or disease group. It addresses 55 viral pathogens, including a few broad groupings, such as "New World hantaviruses." Because of increasing travel, which is eroding geographic barriers to disease transmission, and because of the emergence and reemergence of uncommon infectious diseases, frontline clinicians are increasingly more likely to encounter patients with exotic viral infections. The arrival of West Nile virus and monkeypox monkeypox /mon·key·pox/ (mung´ke-poks) a mild, epidemic, exanthematous disease occurring in monkeys and other mammals; when transmitted to humans, it causes a disease clinically similar to smallpox. virus in North America demonstrates the potential for importation of unusual viral pathogens. An 8-page overview of the assessment and evaluation of febrile febrile /feb·rile/ (feb´ril) pertaining to or characterized by fever. feb·rile (f b r viral syndromes precedes a series of four tables listing syndrome complexes, animal reservoirs, infectious vectors, and routes of infection. The tables are followed by sections describing each pathogen in alphabetical order. Each section includes common and generic designations for the virus, reservoirs, vectors, modes of transmission, incubation periods, "clinical hints," "typical therapy," and geographic distribution of the illnesses, and recommend diagnostic procedures and laboratory biosafety levels. Sections end with a list of additional reading, ranging from 3 to 22 citations, including journal articles, book chapters, and electronic citations. In addition to the tables noted above, 10 charts are distributed throughout the sections, demonstrating disease incidence during recent decades. The book is indexed and has a 10-page appendix of drugs and vaccines and a 5-page appendix of diagnostic tests. It has no illustrations. An accompanying mini-CD ROM contains the same material as the printed edition. Though the handbook's coverage of topics is superficial, its format makes this a useful quick reference, for example, as a reminder for clinicians assembling differential diagnosis lists for a febrile viral syndrome. The vector and syndrome tables are handy, and the disease descriptions contain sufficient information fro preliminary consideration. However, this is not an exhaustive guide for clinical care and, as pointed out by the authors, does not obviate consultation of a more substantial reference or an expert in the management of a specific disease. Limited attention is given to isolation and infection-control recommendations. The CD ROM is a convenient feature, for example, for field use; however, more informative disks that accompany larger virology texts would probably have greater utility in such a setting. Address for correspondence: Michael Bell, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 1600 Clifton Rd. NE, Mailstop A26, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA; fax: 404.639.1509; email: mbell@cdc.gov Michael Bell, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. The CDC is the federal agency responsible for administering national programs for the prevention and control of communicable and vector-borne diseases and for developing and implementing programs for dealing with environmental health problems., Atlanta, Georgia, USA |
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