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Infection01:20

Infection

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When a pathogen enters the body and reproduces, it can cause an infection, damage body cells, and cause illness symptoms that eventually lead to disease. Therefore, its prevention requires breaking the chain of infection.
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Disease surveillance is the systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of health data essential to the planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health practice. This process integrates data dissemination to entities responsible for preventing and controlling disease, injury, and disability. Surveillance systems provide crucial information for action, helping public health authorities make informed decisions to manage and prevent outbreaks, ensure public safety, optimize...
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Cells are sometimes infected by more than one virus at once. When two viruses disassemble to expose their genomes for replication in the same cell, similar regions of their genomes can pair together and exchange sequences in a process called recombination. Alternatively, viruses with segmented genomes can swap segments in a process called reassortment.
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Updated: Aug 25, 2025

Vaccinia Virus Infection & Temporal Analysis of Virus Gene Expression: Part 1
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Monkeypox unnoticed?

Michael Le Page

    New Scientist (1971)
    |October 17, 2022
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    A novel virus variant causing a global outbreak may have been present in human populations for an extended period, potentially years. This finding suggests a longer, undetected circulation phase before widespread detection.

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    Area of Science:

    • Virology
    • Epidemiology
    • Public Health

    Background:

    • A novel virus variant has emerged, leading to a significant worldwide outbreak.
    • The origin and timeline of the variant's circulation in human populations remain unclear.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To investigate the potential duration of human circulation for the virus variant responsible for the current global outbreak.
    • To understand the epidemiological history of the variant.

    Main Methods:

    • Phylogenetic analysis of viral genetic sequences.
    • Retrospective epidemiological data review.
    • Molecular clock estimations.

    Main Results:

    • Evidence suggests the virus variant may have been circulating in humans for several years prior to its widespread recognition.
    • Initial detection may not reflect the true onset of transmission.

    Conclusions:

    • The findings indicate a potentially prolonged, undetected incubation and transmission period for this virus variant.
    • This has implications for surveillance strategies and understanding outbreak dynamics.