He contracted such a bad case of trichinosis that he later died.
2
Consequently his mind was in a whirl of icebergs, Maupassant, and trichinosis.
3
I guess there's always that trichinosis thing, but you don't know about that for years.
4
Pork can harbor trichina, the parasite responsible for trichinosis.
5
I'd always thought they developed as a primitive way to avoid trichinosis and other nasty diseases.
6
In 1950, there were 400 recorded cases of trichinosis in the United States.
7
Although at one time trichinosis was a worry, it has been all but eradicated from pork sold commercially today.
8
I hoped they'd get trichinosis.
9
And you're sure that in addition to not getting rabies, these manitous don't have nematode worms and won't give you trichinosis?
10
The farm buildings are kept most scrupulously clean, for the slightest neglect would probably occasion an epidemic of trichinosis among the pigs.
11
No doubt there is well established evidence that some diseases, such as the dread trichinosis, are acquired by the consumption of diseased meat.
12
Let us not swell with pride as we refer to our ancestors, whose lives were marked by an eternal combat between malignant alcoholism and trichinosis.
13
Moses Mendlessohn having fallen ill sent for a Christian physician, who at once diagnosed the philosopher's disorder as trichinosis, but tactfully gave it another name.
14
The New Yorker, November 18, 1950 P. 157 Annals of Medicine about a group of people who contracted trichinosis from eating improperly cooked pork.
15
TRICHINOSIS, n. The pig's reply to proponents of porcophagy.
16
Trichinosis- aparasiticinfection from roundworm-hashistorically been a concern in pork, but this is no longer the case in the United States.