Leptospirosis is a zoonotic feral nidal disease (synonyms: Weil-Vasilyev disease, waterborne fever) running as an acute febrile disease with evident intoxication, renal, hepatic, and central nervous system involvements, evolving hemorrhagic syndrome mainly with its severe complicated course and high mortality rates. The clinical features of leptospirosis have been little studied in patients with comorbidities. Its poor outcomes are generally due to the development of serious complications, such as infection-toxic shock, acute renal and hepatic failure, massive hemorrhagic syndrome, infectious myocarditis, etc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLeptospirosis (Weil-Vasiliev disease) is a zoonotic natural focal disease running as an acute fever with severe intoxication, lesion of the kidneys, liver, CNS, hemorrhagic syndrome, complications, frequent lethal outcomes. Clinical features of leptospirosis in patients with comorbid diseases are not studied adequately. Lethal outcomes are often caused by such serious complications as infectious-toxic shock, acute renal-hepatic failure, massive hemorrhagic syndrome, infectious myocarditis, etc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol
December 2001