《传染病的形成》.2005年.第7期
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- Yersinia pseudotuberculosis Septicemia and HIV
- Bordetella petrii Clinical Isolate
- Hedgehog Zoonoses
- Bartonella henselae and Domestic Cats, Jamaica
- Pandemic Vibrio parahaemolyticus O3:K6 Spread, France
- Third Borrelia Species in White-footed Mice
- Third Borrelia Species in White-footed Mice
- Cell Phones and Acinetobacter Transmission
- Attributing Illness to Food
- Occupational Deaths among Healthcare Workers
- Wildlife Trade and Global Disease Emergence
- Caliciviruses and Foodborne Gastroenteritis, Chile
- Drug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae in Michigan
- SARS Vaccine Development
- West Nile Virus–associated Flaccid Paralysis
- Primate-to-Human Retroviral Transmission in Asia
- Nipah Virus in Lyle's Flying Foxes, Cambodia
- Leptospirosis in Germany, 1962–2003
- Survey of Tickborne Infections in Denmark
- Emergency Department Response to SARS, Taiwan
- Beliefs about Appropriate Antibacterial Therapy, California
- Human Metapneumovirus Genetic Variability, South Africa
- Norovirus Recombination in ORF1/ORF2 Overlap
- Adventitious Agents and Smallpox Vaccine in Strategic National Stockpile
- New Lymphogranuloma Venereum Chlamydia trachomatis Variant, Amsterdam
- Household Transmission of Gastroenteritis
- Nosocomial Malaria and Saline Flush
- Blackwater Fever in Children, Burundi
- Cervids as Babesiae Hosts, Slovenia
- Salmonella Agona Outbreak from Contaminated Aniseed, Germany
- West Nile Virus Detection and Commercial Assays
- Concurrent Dengue and Malaria
- Hepatitis A, Italy
- Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in Salad
- Avian Influenza H5N1 and Healthcare Workers
- Influenza A H5N1 Replication Sites in Humans
- Risk Factors for Pediatric Invasive Group A Streptococcal Disease
- West Nile Virus Surveillance, Guadeloupe, 2003–2004
- Comparing Diagnostic Coding and Laboratory Results
- SARS Coronavirus Detection Methods
- Veillonella montpellierensis Endocarditis
- Burkholderia fungorum Septicemia
- Asymptomatic SARS Coronavirus Infection among Healthcare Workers, Singapore
- Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli and Vibrio cholerae Diarrhea, Bangladesh, 2004