• This article is primarily about the use of inoculation for producing immunity against infection. Inoculation has been used to eradicate smallpox and to...
    35 KB (4,070 words) - 18:22, 27 April 2024
  • An inoculation loop (also called a smear loop, inoculation wand or microstreaker) is a simple tool used mainly by microbiologists to pick up and transfer...
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  • studies where inoculation theory was applied to health-related messaging. There are many inoculation studies with the intent to inoculate children and...
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    standard reusable inoculation needle is made from nichrome or platinum wire affixed to a metallic handle. A disposable inoculation needle is often made...
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    smallpox victim, through a small incision on the person being inoculated. At the time, inoculation offered a mortality chance of 2%, while smallpox contracted...
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    subject of inoculation could not be found in the Bible, it was not the will of God, and therefore "unlawful." He explained that inoculation violated The...
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  • introduction to inoculation from Onesimus In 1716 or shortly before,[dead link] Onesimus had described to Mather the process of inoculation that had been...
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    such physician, William Douglass, was a vehement inoculation opponent who published anti-inoculation pamphlets in response to Mather's experiment. One...
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    twenty-five different preventable infections. The first recorded use of inoculation to prevent smallpox occurred in the 16th century in China, with the earliest...
    139 KB (14,389 words) - 19:40, 15 April 2024
  • Primary inoculation tuberculosis is a skin condition that develops at the site of inoculation of tubercle bacilli into a tuberculosis-free individual...
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  • Norfolk Anti-Inoculation Riot on June 27, 1768 was part of a series of riots across the English Colonies in the New World surrounding inoculation against smallpox...
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  • Herpes virus may refer to: Any member of the large family of DNA viruses known as Herpesviridae Human herpesviruses, nine types of herpesviruses that can...
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    protecting oneself against this disease, quarantine or inoculation against the disease. Many feared inoculation, and instead chose isolation via quarantine. Individuals...
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  • The malaria therapy (or malaria inoculation, and sometimes malariotherapy) is an archaic medical procedure of treating diseases using artificial injection...
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    Hospital, sometimes known as the Middlesex County Hospital for Smallpox and Inoculation, was established in 1745–6 and was said to be the first establishment...
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    is referred to as regional lymphadenopathy and occurs 1–3 weeks after inoculation. Lymphadenopathy most commonly occurs in the axilla, arms, neck, or jaw...
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  • On Immunity: An Inoculation is a nonfiction book by Eula Biss published by Graywolf Press in 2014. It is primarily about vaccination of children. Bill...
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  • those grains. This is called inoculation. Inoculated grains (or plugs) are referred to as spawn. Spores are another inoculation option, but are less developed...
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    letters encouraged further application of inoculation in the fight against diseases. The first inoculation against measles was made three years after...
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    induction of immunity / Immunization: Vaccines, Vaccination, Infection, Inoculation (J07) Development Adjuvants Vaccine ingredients list Mathematical modelling...
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  • the source material used for inoculation. Inoculum may refer to: In medicine, material that is the source of the inoculation in a vaccine In microbiology...
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  • microbiological sterilization and disinfection" (see relevant section). An inoculation loop is used to transfer bacteria for microbiological culture. Petri...
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    idea that inoculation originated in India has been challenged, as few of the ancient Sanskrit medical texts described the process of inoculation. Accounts...
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    reference to smallpox inoculation was made by the Chinese author Wan Quan (1499–1582) in his Douzhen xinfa (痘疹心法) published in 1549. Inoculation for smallpox does...
    112 KB (12,138 words) - 18:33, 27 April 2024
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    Tsar Paul, inoculated. The Russians continued to refine the process. Nevertheless, inoculation was not always a safe process; inoculates developed a...
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  • cause confusion. In 18th-century medical terminology, inoculation refers to smallpox inoculation. Confusion is caused by writers who interchange variolation...
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  • be prepared using sterile technique with a single-line streak inoculation. The inoculated plates are incubated at 37 °C for 24–48 hours to establish colonies...
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  • before they have a chance to raise the counterargument themselves. This "inoculation" can be subtle, but also signaled rather obviously (e.g., "Now, my opponent...
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    Inoculation was already a standard practice in Asian and African medicine but involved serious risks, including the possibility that those inoculated...
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  • be screened out of the training. Those who remain can be given stress inoculation training. The process is repeated as personnel apply for increasingly...
    132 KB (15,394 words) - 20:28, 25 April 2024