General Index WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
enterotoxin, 1:189
sensitivity to temperature and pH ranges, 2:404
Vibrio fischeri,1:354
Vibrio furnisii,1:118
Vibrio parahaemolyticus,1:47
Vinblastine, 1:117
Vincristine, 1:117
Vinograd, Jerome, 2:375
Viral classification, 2:579
Viral epidemics. SeeEpidemics and pandemics; Epidemics, viral
Viral gastroenteritis, 1:236
Viral genetics, 2:438, 2:577–578
Asilomar conference, 1:36
bacteriophages and bacteriophage typing, 1:55–56
latent viruses and disease, 1:340–341
lysogeny, 1:356–357
oncogene, 2:415
phage genetics, 2:433–434
phage therapy, 2:434
phylogeny, 2:437–438
plant viruses, 2:441–442
radiation mutagenesis, 2:477–478
retroviruses, 2:486–487
RNA tumor viruses, 2:493–494
slow viruses, 2:519–520
transduction, 2:439
See alsoMicrobial genetics; Viral vectors in gene therapy
Viral infection
AIDS, 1:7–9
antiviral drugs, 1:33
arenavirus, 1:34–35
blood borne infections, 1:80–82
cats, 2:575
Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 1:110–112
chickenpox, 2:572–573
common cold, 1:127–128
dogs, 2:575
enterovirusinfection, 1:189–190
environmental contamination, 1:136–137
epidemics, 1:193–194, 1:196–198
eye infections, 1:212–213
gastroenteritis, 1:236
hand-foot-mouth disease, 1:258
hantavirus and Hanta disease, 1:258–259
hemorrhagic fevers and diseases, 1:263–264
hepatitis, 1:264–267
human immunodeficiency virus, 1:279–280
immune system, 1:287–288
infection and resistance, 1:308–310
infection control, 1:310–311
invasiveness and intracellular infection, 1:315
latent viruses, 1:340–341
Lichen planus, 1:348
measles, 2:368–369
meningitis, 2:374–375
mononucleosis, 2:399
mumps, 2:402–403
pneumonia, 2:444–445
poliomyelitis and polio, 2:445–446
rabies, 2:475–477
retroviruses, 2:486–487
rheumatic fever, 2:532
sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), 2:510–514
skin infections, 2:516–517
slow viral infection, 2:519
smallpox, 1:76, 1:196, 2:520–522, 2:568–572
strep throat, 2:532
swine fever, 2:536–537
T cells (T lymphocytes), 2:539–540
transduction, 2:439
varicella, 2:572–573
varicella zoster virus, 2:573–574
variola virus, 2:520–521, 2:574
West Nile virus, 2:597–598
yellow fever, 2:613–614
See alsoPlant viruses
Viral infections
chemotherapy, 1:116–117
cowpox, 1:138
transmission of pathogens, 2:553
Viral pneumonia, 2:444–445
Viral vectors in gene therapy, 2:578–579
phage therapy, 2:434
retroviruses, 2:486–487
Virchow, Rudolf, 1:247, 2:648
Virology, viral classification, types of viruses, 2:579–581
Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 1:110–112
epidemics, 1:196–198
latent viruses and disease, 1:340–341
oncogene, 2:415
plant viruses, 2:441–442
See alsoViral genetics; Viral infection; Viral vectors in gene
therapy; Virus replication; Viruses and responses to viral
infection
Virus replication, 2:581–582,2: 582
bacteriophages and bacteriophage typing, 1:55–56
Beijerinck, Martinus Willem, 1:59–60
herpes and herpes virus, 1:267–268
interferons, 1:313–314
lysogeny, 1:356–357
oncogene, 2:415
retroviruses, 2:486–487
Viruses, 2:582–585
adenoviruses, 1:3–4, 2:581, 2:584
AIDS, 1:7–9
Andes virus, 1:259
antiviral drugs, 1:33
arenavirus, 1:34–35
Arenaviruses, 1:34–35, 1:263
Asfivirus,2:536
Bayou virus, 1:259
Birnaviruses, 2:580
Black Creek Canal virus, 1:259
Blue River virus, 1:259
Bunyavirus group, 1:263
cauliflower mosaic virus (CMV), 2:515
Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 1:110–112
classification of, 2:577, 2:579
cold viruses, 1:128–129
common cold, 1:127–128
contamination, 1:135–136
Coronavirus, 1:129, 2:575
Coxsackie virus group, 1:258
Ebola virus, 1:81, 1:81,1:172–173, 1:173,1:264, 2:585, 2:657
enterovirus infections, 1:189–190
epadnaviruses, 1:264
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