The relation of fever and of subnormal temperatures to resistance and to well-being has been a matter of debate and varying practice for centuries.Since the dawn of history hot and cold topical applications and baths have had wide popularity, and antipyretic drugs have been used to a greater or less extent ever since their discovery. In 1878 Pasteur, Joubert, and Chamberland noted that susceptibility to anthrax could be induced in fowl, animals normally resistant to this infection, simply by immersing them up to the thighs in a bath held at 25 C. The animals so treated suffered a reduction in temperature to 37 to 38 C and died of anthrax within 24 to 30 hours following inoculation with Bacillus anthracis, whereas the controls remained alive...
Fever, the rise in body temperature set point in response to infection or injury, is a highly conser...
The development of an appropriate animal therapeutic model is essential to assess the potential effi...
The effects of variations in temperature within the physiologic range on minimal in-hibitory concent...
Although an extensive descriptive literature on fever and the influence of temperature upon biologic...
Many diseases are characterized by the production of a fever in the infected host. Contrary to early...
F EVER has been recognized as a common and reliable sign of disease for many centuries, and many of ...
The controlled nsc in body temperature that occurs during fever is a hallmark of disease activity. I...
Accompanying certain types of inflammation the heat-regulating mechanism of the body is disrupted so...
During the past three years studies of the effects of artificial fever on the cellular equilibria in...
1. Fever and survival rate of New Zealand white rabbits, injected with two doses of live Pasteurella...
Fever, although part of the second line of defense in immune response, is still a topic of discussio...
Friedberger-Mita suggested from the point of view of their own experiments on the anaphylactic fever...
Body-temperature elevations are multifactorial in origin and classified as hyperthermia as a rise in...
Fever is a response to infection characterised by an increase in body temperature. The adaptive valu...
Fever is a response to infection characterised by an increase in body temperature. The adaptive valu...
Fever, the rise in body temperature set point in response to infection or injury, is a highly conser...
The development of an appropriate animal therapeutic model is essential to assess the potential effi...
The effects of variations in temperature within the physiologic range on minimal in-hibitory concent...
Although an extensive descriptive literature on fever and the influence of temperature upon biologic...
Many diseases are characterized by the production of a fever in the infected host. Contrary to early...
F EVER has been recognized as a common and reliable sign of disease for many centuries, and many of ...
The controlled nsc in body temperature that occurs during fever is a hallmark of disease activity. I...
Accompanying certain types of inflammation the heat-regulating mechanism of the body is disrupted so...
During the past three years studies of the effects of artificial fever on the cellular equilibria in...
1. Fever and survival rate of New Zealand white rabbits, injected with two doses of live Pasteurella...
Fever, although part of the second line of defense in immune response, is still a topic of discussio...
Friedberger-Mita suggested from the point of view of their own experiments on the anaphylactic fever...
Body-temperature elevations are multifactorial in origin and classified as hyperthermia as a rise in...
Fever is a response to infection characterised by an increase in body temperature. The adaptive valu...
Fever is a response to infection characterised by an increase in body temperature. The adaptive valu...
Fever, the rise in body temperature set point in response to infection or injury, is a highly conser...
The development of an appropriate animal therapeutic model is essential to assess the potential effi...
The effects of variations in temperature within the physiologic range on minimal in-hibitory concent...