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Volumn 351, Issue 6269, 2016, Pages 110-111
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A race to explain Brazil's spike in birth defects : Evidence points toward the fast-spreading Zika virus as the cause of microcephaly
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Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
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Indexed keywords
IMMUNOGLOBULIN M ANTIBODY;
BRAIN;
CHILD HEALTH;
DISEASE SEVERITY;
DISEASE SPREAD;
HEALTH RISK;
NERVOUS SYSTEM DISORDER;
PREGNANCY;
PUBLIC HEALTH;
SIZE;
SYMPTOM;
VIRAL DISEASE;
VIRUS;
AMNION FLUID;
BRAZIL;
CONGENITAL MALFORMATION;
FEMALE;
FETUS DEVELOPMENT;
HUMAN;
IMMUNE RESPONSE;
LEARNING DISORDER;
MICROCEPHALY;
MOTOR PERFORMANCE;
NONHUMAN;
PRIORITY JOURNAL;
SHORT SURVEY;
UMBILICAL CORD BLOOD;
VIRUS;
ZIKA VIRUS;
COMMUNICABLE DISEASES, EMERGING;
EPIDEMIC;
FETUS BLOOD;
FLAVIVIRUS;
FLAVIVIRUS INFECTIONS;
INFANT;
ISOLATION AND PURIFICATION;
NEWBORN;
PHYSIOLOGY;
PREGNANCY;
PREGNANCY COMPLICATION;
VIROLOGY;
VIRUS ACTIVATION;
BRAZIL;
ZIKA VIRUS;
BRAZIL;
COMMUNICABLE DISEASES, EMERGING;
DISEASE OUTBREAKS;
FEMALE;
FETAL BLOOD;
FLAVIVIRUS;
FLAVIVIRUS INFECTIONS;
HUMANS;
INFANT;
INFANT, NEWBORN;
MICROCEPHALY;
PREGNANCY;
PREGNANCY COMPLICATIONS, INFECTIOUS;
VIRUS ACTIVATION;
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EID: 84955166818
PISSN: 00368075
EISSN: 10959203
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1126/science.351.6269.110 Document Type: Short Survey |
Times cited : (17)
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References (0)
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