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Two Cases of Q Fever Endocarditis

Moon SY, Choi YS, Park MY, Lee JA, Chung MK, Chung HS, Jung DR, Song JH, Peck KR

Q fever is a zoonosis caused by Coxiella burnetii, presenting as acute and chronic illness and it has been reported worldwide. Acute Q fever is usually asymptomatic or mild and...
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A Cases of Q Fever with Agranulocytosis

  • KMID: 1661926
  • J Korean Pediatr Soc.
  • 1995 Jun;38(6):848-852.
No abstract available.
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A Case of Q Fever: Person-to-Person Transmission

An SJ, Koo JW, Chung CY, Lee WY

  • KMID: 2208046
  • J Korean Pediatr Soc.
  • 1998 Jan;41(1):120-124.
Q fever is an important zoonosis caused by the rickrttsial organism, Coxiella burnetii. It is a very contagious organism which humans can contact by inhaling aerosolized organisms. Most commonly it...
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Q Fever as a Cause of Acute Hepatitis Accompanying Fever

Lee HJ, Kim JH, Yoon EL, Lee YS, Yeon JE, Byun KS, Kim BH, Ryu Y

Q fever is a zoonotic infection caused by Coxiella burnetti, which has been previously regarded as an uncommon infectious disease in Korea but is sporadically reported recently. Common manifestations of...
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A case of acute Q fever with fibrin-ring granuloma in the bone marrow and lymph node biopsy

Cho OH, Choi YS, Kim T, Park KH, Oh R, Chi HS, Kim YS

  • KMID: 2081682
  • Korean J Med.
  • 2009 Apr;76(Suppl 1):S190-S194.
Q fever is a zoonotic infection caused by Coxiella burnetii. Acute Q fever usually develops as a self-limited flu-like illness, atypical pneumonia, or hepatitis. We experienced a case of Q...
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A Case of Q Fever that may Mimic Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Lee HM, Mo SI, Cho HW, Lee SJ, Jun BG, Kim KW, Kim JY, Kim YI, Nah SS

Q fever is a zoonosis caused by a Coxiella burnetii. Q fever is clinically variable, presenting as asymptomatic infection, pneumonia, hepatitis and endocarditis. Treatment of acute Q fever with doxycycline...
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A Case of Acute Q Fever Hepatitis Diagnosed by F-18 FDG PET/CT

Oh M, Baek S, Lee SO, Yu E, Ryu JS

  • KMID: 2052009
  • Nucl Med Mol Imaging.
  • 2012 Jun;46(2):125-128.
A 53-year-old man with fever of unknown origin underwent F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (F-18 FDG PET/CT) as a workup for a fever of unknown origin. On presentation, he...
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A Case of Acute Q Fever with Severe Acute Cholestatic Hepatitis

Choi HC, Lee SH, Kim J, Kim SH, Hwang JH, Kim JW, Jeong SH, Kim H

Minimal hepatic dysfunction can be common in acute Q fever, but severe acute cholestatic hepatitis is rarely reported. We report on a 55-year-old male with acute Q fever and severe...
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A case of Q fever

Shin YJ, Yoo NC, Choi W, Yang DG, Lee HL, Cheon SH, Chang J, Kim SK, Lee WY

  • KMID: 1698138
  • Korean J Intern Med.
  • 1992 May;42(5):690-698.
No abstract available.
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Clinicopathologic Features of Q Fever Patients with Acute Hepatitis

Lee M, Jang JJ, Kim YS, Lee SO, Choi SH, Kim SH, Yu E

BACKGROUND: Q fever caused by Coxiella burnetii presents with diverse clinical and pathological features including subclinical or cholestatic hepatitis. However, the pathological features of liver biopsies from patients with Q...
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A case of Q fever: associated with pancytopenia, hepatitis, and myocarditis

Park HS, Lee EG, Lee SY, Lyu CJ, Son YM, Kim DS, Kim KY, Lee WY

  • KMID: 1699660
  • Korean J Infect Dis.
  • 1992 Feb;24(1):45-54.
No abstract available.
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Prevalence of antibodies to the phase I antigen of coxiella burnetii , the Q fever agent, among residents in Korea

Cho SN, Lee MK, Lee JM, Kim JD, Lee WY

  • KMID: 1687980
  • J Korean Soc Microbiol.
  • 1992 Jun;27(3):283-288.
No abstract available.
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Q fever as a cause of fever of unknown origin

Heo ST, Park MY, Choi YS, Oh WS, Ko KS, Peck KR, Song JH

  • KMID: 2305892
  • Korean J Med.
  • 2008 Jan;74(1):100-105.
Q fever is an orthozoonotic infection caused by Coxiella burnetii, which was recently reclassified from the order Rickettsials to the order Legionellales. Although Q fever is usually mild and self-limiting,...
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Clinical and Genetic Features of Coxiella burnetii in a Patient with an Acute Febrile Illness in Korea

Lee SH, Heo JY, Lee HK, Lee YS, Jeong HW, Hwang SD

Although Q fever is an important zoonotic infection with a worldwide distribution, no human isolates of Coxiella burnetii have been identified in Korea. For the first time, we identified the...
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Coxiella Burnetii Infection in Patiets with Various Diseases

Kim KS, Lee WY

  • KMID: 2208538
  • J Korean Pediatr Soc.
  • 1994 Mar;37(3):356-367.
Coxiella burnetii(C. burneii)was first recognized as the agent of Q fever in 1937. Q fever is an acute self-limited febrile illness. However, it manifests with several clinical symptoms depending upon...
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Distribution of Antibodies to Coxiella burnetii in Patients with Unknown Fever and Atypical Pneumonia

Park MS, Park MY, Shin YO

  • KMID: 2054974
  • J Bacteriol Virol.
  • 2003 Dec;33(4):307-315.
Coxiella burnetii is the causative agent of Q fever worldwide in human and animals. While several clinical cases of Q fever were reported in Korea till the middle of 1990s,...
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Awareness of Major Zoonoses among Dairy Farmers in Gyeonggi Province

Choi KB, Lim HS, Lee K, Min YS

  • KMID: 2286667
  • J Agric Med Community Health.
  • 2010 Dec;35(4):339-349.
OBJECTIVES: We surveyed awareness levels of brucellosis, Q fever and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) among dairy farmers in Gyeonggi Province to suggest directions for public education and public relations. METHODS: We...
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Clinical characteristics of acute Q fever in Daegu area

Lee KS, Choi YS, Kwon KT, Lee MJ, Seo AY, Lee SW, Han SW, Kim GW, Kim HS, Park CG, Sohn KR, Kim SW, Chang HH, Ryu SY

  • KMID: 2259343
  • Korean J Med.
  • 2010 Oct;79(4):404-411.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Although only a few sporadic cases of Q fever have been reported in Korea, a total of 13 cases have been seen in our area. We performed this study...
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Trends of Bacterial Zoonoses in Humans in Korea

Choi CS

Out of 60 national communicable diseases in Korea, 23 are zoonoses, diseases transmissible from animals to humans. Among the bacterial zoonoses, plague, brucellosis, anthrax, Q fever, tularemia, glanders, and melioidosis...
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A Case of Scrub Typhus in Summer Presenting as Atypical Pneumonia

Park SD, Chung MH, Lee HM, Kim MK, Kang JS

Scrub typhus usually occurs in October and November in Korea. Its typical clinical manifestations are fever, rash, eschar, and lymphadenopathies. Pneumonitis may occur, however, it occurs as a complication at...
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