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This remarkable Soviet monograph on Omsk hemorrhagic fever (OHF) is available to us in English because the late, and legendary, Harry Hoogstraal believed that it will make entomological and epidemiological history in the West. To make it available, he spent hundreds of hours working on the manuscript with Sophie Korzelska, his able Russian translator at NAMRU-3 in Cairo; subsequently he spent much additional time to make sure that the translation would be published.
Kharitonova and Leonov, with their colleagues from the Siberian Division of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, spent 13 years (1963ā1976) on a study of the natural history of OHF in a typical ecologic nicheāa lake in the West Siberian steppe. They concluded that the virus of OHF, classified as a tick-borne arbovirus, is transmitted in that setting not by arthropods, but by ingestion of contaminated water. The water is contaminated by the virus-laden excreta of persistently and chronically infected water voles (Arvicola terrestris).
Past two years | Past Year | Past 30 Days | |
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Abstract Views | 182 | 75 | 2 |
Full Text Views | 5 | 0 | 0 |
PDF Downloads | 2 | 0 | 0 |