Against the background of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and other potentially emerging (or re–emerging) infectious diseases, this review will focus on the properties which enable an infectious agent to establish and maintain itself within a specified host population. We shall emphasize that for a pathogen to cross a species barrier is one thing, but for it successfully to maintain itself in the new population is must have a ‘basic reproductive number’, R0, which satisfies R0 > 1. We shall further discuss how behavioural factors interweave with the basic biology of the production of transmission stages by the pathogen, all subject to possible secular changes, to determine the magnitude of R...
Viruses have attracted the interest of researchers from multiple disciplines and have nucleated many...
Early theoretical work on disease invasion typically assumed large and well-mixed host populations. ...
Many infectious pathogens, and in particular viruses, have an extremely high rate of mutation. This ...
Against the background of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and acquired immune deficiency syndrome...
Against the background of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and acquired immune deficiency syndrome...
Based on the current understanding of the immune response, we present what we believe to be a new mo...
It is unclear when, where and how novel pathogens such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), monkey...
A theory for the pathogenesis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection is presented ...
In this paper we reviewed what is known about the emerging viruses, the hosts that they originate in...
If viruses or other pathogens infect a single host, the outcome of infection may depend on the initi...
Humans are constant victims of infectious diseases. Biomedical research during this century has led ...
In the absence of treatment, HIV-1 infection, usually starting with a single virion, leads inex-orab...
INTRODUCTION: The evolution of virulence in host-parasite relationships has been the subject of seve...
Models of viral population dynamics have contributed enormously to our understanding of the pathogen...
AbstractMaximization of the basic reproduction ratio or R0 is widely believed to drive the emergence...
Viruses have attracted the interest of researchers from multiple disciplines and have nucleated many...
Early theoretical work on disease invasion typically assumed large and well-mixed host populations. ...
Many infectious pathogens, and in particular viruses, have an extremely high rate of mutation. This ...
Against the background of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and acquired immune deficiency syndrome...
Against the background of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and acquired immune deficiency syndrome...
Based on the current understanding of the immune response, we present what we believe to be a new mo...
It is unclear when, where and how novel pathogens such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), monkey...
A theory for the pathogenesis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection is presented ...
In this paper we reviewed what is known about the emerging viruses, the hosts that they originate in...
If viruses or other pathogens infect a single host, the outcome of infection may depend on the initi...
Humans are constant victims of infectious diseases. Biomedical research during this century has led ...
In the absence of treatment, HIV-1 infection, usually starting with a single virion, leads inex-orab...
INTRODUCTION: The evolution of virulence in host-parasite relationships has been the subject of seve...
Models of viral population dynamics have contributed enormously to our understanding of the pathogen...
AbstractMaximization of the basic reproduction ratio or R0 is widely believed to drive the emergence...
Viruses have attracted the interest of researchers from multiple disciplines and have nucleated many...
Early theoretical work on disease invasion typically assumed large and well-mixed host populations. ...
Many infectious pathogens, and in particular viruses, have an extremely high rate of mutation. This ...