Background: Completed genome sequences are rapidly increasing for Rickettsia, obligate intracellular alpha-proteobacteria responsible for various human diseases, including epidemictyphus and Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
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The petechialfever in Italy in 1505 was a form of the sweating sickness.
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It may also complicate some general diseases, especially infectious diseases, as anthrax, influenza, rabies, or petechialfever.
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It is said that in 1524 a petechialfever carried off 50,000 people in Milan, and possibly this was the same disease.
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There is an outbreak on the hulks-itsounds like jailfever.
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Lord Bacon declared the jailfever "the most pernicious infection next to the plague."
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He had caught the jailfever, which had long raged in the Carcel de la Corte, where I was imprisoned.
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"I understood that he died of a jailfever, caught at the Assizes, where he was serving on-whatdo you call it?"
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Will make some man a jewel of a wife, if she don't go mad, or die of the hospitalfever.
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It was the last; he never came back again; he died of shipfever.
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No fear of scurvy or shipfever this voyage.
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They had all had shipfever, and a more wretched looking family I had never seen.
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Also called jail, camp, hospital, or shipfever.
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Why I heard that the shipfever was raging here-thatthe hospitals were crowded, and many of your doctors sick!
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We weren't afraid of the faminefever in the old times.
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Shame?-Isit not a faminefever which never comes near a well-ladentable?
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The " faminefever" carried away multitudes to an untimely grave.
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They illustrate the fact that Nature, even when perverted by generations of faminefever, ignores the distinctions we set up between men.
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Such a unique triple disaster of AIDS, famine , and faminefevers requires new thinking.
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The percentage of those who die from campfever has been reduced to a minimum.
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The years in the desert, and her recent bout with campfever, had aged her to a frightening degree.
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She had been struck by the potentially deadly campfever and had been fading in and out of consciousness for the past hour.
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What were then known as campfevers had already broken out in August.
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The lake Indians had suffered severely from the war, chiefly from the campfevers and irregularities.
Ús de putrid fever en anglès
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His disease was a putridfever, and the apothecary had bled him repeatedly.
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His mistress had died, the day before, of a putridfever.
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Cowardice is catching and will run through an army like the putridfever.'
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A kind of putridfever broke out, which attacked people of all races alike.
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The Squire sickened of a putridfever; and Madam caught it in nursing him, and died.
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A violent putridfever swept off much greater numbers than all the diseases of the camp.
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Most of the twenty-three who survived until morning were seized with putridfever and died very soon afterward.
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Bobby will almost certainly be sent to Hong-Kong, and, as a natural consequence, die of a putridfever.
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At the autopsy of her body Maestro Pasquali of Florence declared that death was caused by putridfever!
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Mirabeau is dead;(770) ay, miraculously; for it was of a putridfever (that began in his heart).
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Her illness was now pronounced to be a determined putridfever, and she was continually in a delirious state.
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There was lately one very violent putridfever which, by timely removal of the patient, was prevented from spreading.
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His pulse is low, his hands cold, and he has many symptoms of a person about to have typhus or putridfever.
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Some forty years ago, in a rural parish in New England, a young man lay apparently on his death-bed with a putridfever.
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In one winter eighteen perished of "a putridfever", and the clergyman "could not raise a sixpence to save a life."
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The school was moved to Southampton, where the three girls all came down with " putridfever", thought to be either diphtheria or typhoid.