puerperal fever - traduction vers néerlandais
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puerperal fever - traduction vers néerlandais

HUMAN DISEASE
Childbed fever; Puerperal sepsis; Puerperal infection; Postpartum fever; Puerperal fever; Puerperal pelvic infection; Postpartum uterine infection; Metritis with pelvic cellulitis; Postpartum metritis; Postpartum infection; Post partum infection; Post partum infections; Maternal sepsis; Childbirth fever; Puerperal infections; Maternal infection; Puerperal (childbed) fever; Postpartum endometritis; Postpartum endomyometritis; Postpartum infection of the uterus; Postcesarean endomyometritis; Puerperal septicaemia
  • Ignaz Semmelweis, discoverer of some of the causes of puerperal fever

puerperal fever         
ernstige vorm van bloedvergiftiging waar een vrouw aan lijdt gedurende geboorte en abortus
typhoid fever         
  • [[Almroth Edward Wright]] developed the first effective typhoid vaccine.
  • Moderately endemic areas}}
  • A 1939 conceptual illustration showing various ways that typhoid bacteria can contaminate a [[water well]] (center)
  • right
  • Pathogenesis of typhoid fever
  •  doi = 10.4269/ajtmh.19-0624 }}</ref>
  • New Typhoid carrier cases reported in L.A. County between 2006 and 2016<ref name="LA county typhoid 2016" />
  • Doctor administering a typhoid [[vaccination]] at a school in [[San Augustine County, Texas]], 1943
  • Vivotif - oral typhoid vaccine of live-attenuated ''S. enterica'' Typhi strain Ty21a
  • Widal test card
BACTERIAL INFECTIOUS DISORDER CONTRACTED BY CONSUMPTION OF FOOD OR DRINK CONTAMINATED WITH SALMONELLA TYPHI. THIS DISORDER IS COMMON IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES AND CAN BE TREATED WITH ANTIBIOTICS.
Typhoid Fever; Enteric fever; Typhoid; Yellow jack (bacterial disease); Slow fever; Westminster fever; Westminster Fever; Typhus abdominalis; Typhus cerebralis; Pneumo-typhus; Gastric fever; Abdominal typhus; Infantile remittant fever; Nervous fever; Pythogenic fever; Drain fever; Low fever
buiktyfus, ingewandtyfus (ernstige ziekte veroorzaakt door speciale buikbacterie)
enteric fever         
  • [[Almroth Edward Wright]] developed the first effective typhoid vaccine.
  • Moderately endemic areas}}
  • A 1939 conceptual illustration showing various ways that typhoid bacteria can contaminate a [[water well]] (center)
  • right
  • Pathogenesis of typhoid fever
  •  doi = 10.4269/ajtmh.19-0624 }}</ref>
  • New Typhoid carrier cases reported in L.A. County between 2006 and 2016<ref name="LA county typhoid 2016" />
  • Doctor administering a typhoid [[vaccination]] at a school in [[San Augustine County, Texas]], 1943
  • Vivotif - oral typhoid vaccine of live-attenuated ''S. enterica'' Typhi strain Ty21a
  • Widal test card
BACTERIAL INFECTIOUS DISORDER CONTRACTED BY CONSUMPTION OF FOOD OR DRINK CONTAMINATED WITH SALMONELLA TYPHI. THIS DISORDER IS COMMON IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES AND CAN BE TREATED WITH ANTIBIOTICS.
Typhoid Fever; Enteric fever; Typhoid; Yellow jack (bacterial disease); Slow fever; Westminster fever; Westminster Fever; Typhus abdominalis; Typhus cerebralis; Pneumo-typhus; Gastric fever; Abdominal typhus; Infantile remittant fever; Nervous fever; Pythogenic fever; Drain fever; Low fever
n. tyfus, ernstige besmettelijke ziekte veroorzaakt door bacteriën in de dunne darm veroorzaakt door salmonella typhi

Définition

puerperal fever
¦ noun fever caused by uterine infection following childbirth.

Wikipédia

Postpartum infections

Postpartum infections, also known as childbed fever and puerperal fever, are any bacterial infections of the female reproductive tract following childbirth or miscarriage. Signs and symptoms usually include a fever greater than 38.0 °C (100.4 °F), chills, lower abdominal pain, and possibly bad-smelling vaginal discharge. It usually occurs after the first 24 hours and within the first ten days following delivery.

The most common infection is that of the uterus and surrounding tissues known as puerperal sepsis, postpartum metritis, or postpartum endometritis. Risk factors include Caesarean section (C-section), the presence of certain bacteria such as group B streptococcus in the vagina, premature rupture of membranes, multiple vaginal exams, manual removal of the placenta, and prolonged labour among others. Most infections involve a number of types of bacteria. Diagnosis is rarely helped by culturing of the vagina or blood. In those who do not improve, medical imaging may be required. Other causes of fever following delivery include breast engorgement, urinary tract infections, infections of an abdominal incision or an episiotomy, and atelectasis.

Due to the risks following Caesarean section, it is recommended that all women receive a preventive dose of antibiotics such as ampicillin around the time of surgery. Treatment of established infections is with antibiotics, with most people improving in two to three days. In those with mild disease, oral antibiotics may be used; otherwise intravenous antibiotics are recommended. Common antibiotics include a combination of ampicillin and gentamicin following vaginal delivery or clindamycin and gentamicin in those who have had a C-section. In those who are not improving with appropriate treatment, other complications such as an abscess should be considered.

In 2015, about 11.8 million maternal infections occurred. In the developed world about 1% to 2% develop uterine infections following vaginal delivery. This increases to 5% to 13% among those who have more difficult deliveries and 50% with C-sections before the use of preventive antibiotics. In 2015, these infections resulted in 17,900 deaths down from 34,000 deaths in 1990. They are the cause of about 10% of deaths around the time of pregnancy. The first known descriptions of the condition date back to at least the 5th century BCE in the writings of Hippocrates. These infections were a very common cause of death around the time of childbirth starting in at least the 18th century until the 1930s when antibiotics were introduced. In 1847, Hungarian physician Ignaz Semmelweiss decreased death from the disease in the First Obstetrical Clinic of Vienna from nearly 20% to 2% through the use of handwashing with calcium hypochlorite.