Brazilian purpuric fever
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Brazilian purpuric fever
Summary
Brazilian purpuric fever is an infectious disease[1]. It draws 8 Wikipedia views per month (infectious_disease category, ranking #207 of 279).[2]
Key Facts
- Brazilian purpuric fever's instance of is recorded as infectious disease[3].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's subclass of is recorded as bacterial infectious disease[4].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's subclass of is recorded as Haemophilus influenzae infectious disease[5].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's ICD-10 ID is recorded as A48.4[6].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's DiseasesDB is recorded as 35123[7].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/08pf5h[8].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's KEGG ID is recorded as H01330[9].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's symptoms and signs is recorded as fever[10].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's symptoms and signs is recorded as conjunctivitis[11].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's symptoms and signs is recorded as nausea[12].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's symptoms and signs is recorded as vomiting[13].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's symptoms and signs is recorded as abdominal pain[14].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's symptoms and signs is recorded as rash[15].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's symptoms and signs is recorded as cyanosis[16].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's symptoms and signs is recorded as necrosis[17].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's symptoms and signs is recorded as septic shock[18].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's has cause is recorded as Haemophilus influenzae biogroup aegyptius[19].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's medical examination is recorded as physical examination[20].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's medical examination is recorded as microbiological culture[21].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's anatomical location is recorded as conjunctiva[22].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's anatomical location is recorded as pharynx[23].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's disease transmission process is recorded as contact transmission[24].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's has natural reservoir is recorded as Liohippelates[25].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's health specialty is recorded as infectious diseases[26].
- Brazilian purpuric fever's drug or therapy used for treatment is recorded as ampicillin[27].
Why It Matters
Brazilian purpuric fever draws 8 Wikipedia views per month (infectious_disease category, ranking #207 of 279).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]