Vibrio cholerae

Spotlights

AGRICOLA Journal Article Citations on Vibrio cholerae

USDA. National Agricultural Library.

Searchable database for journal citations available to persons interested in information on Vibrio cholerae.


Books and Materials on Vibrio cholerae in the NAL Catalog (AGRICOLA)

USDA. National Agricultural Library.

Searchable database for resources available to persons interested in information on Vibrio cholerae.


2010 Travelers' Health - Yellow Book: Cholera

DHHS. CDC. National Center for Infectious Diseases.

Identifies the infectious agent Vibrio cholerae and summarizes the mode of transmission, occurrence, risk for travelers, clinical presentation, diagnosis, treatment and preventive measures associated with the agent.


USDA ARS Manuscripts (Published and Pre-published)

USDA. Agricultural Research Service.

Searchable manuscripts database for various publications on vibrio cholerae.


Bacteriological Analytical Manual Online, Chapter 9: Vibrio

DHHS. FDA. Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition.

Analyzes different members of the species Vibrio, lists the biochemical characteristics of each member as found in contaminated seafood, indicates the distribution and sources of contamination for each member, summarizes the methods of isolation and identifies general considerations, precautions and procedures to follow for each member.


PubMED Journal Citations on Vibrio cholerae

DHHS. NIH. National Library of Medicine.

Searchable database for journal citations available to persons interested in information on Vibrio cholerae .


Todar's Online Textbook of Bacteriology

University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Introduces the pathogenic bacterium Vibrio cholerae and summarizes the clinical description, treatment, history and spread, toxin, colonization, genetic organization and regulation of virulence factors and immunity of cholera.


Two Cases of Toxigenic Vibrio cholerae O1 Infection After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita --- Louisiana, October 2005

DHHS. CDC. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Review.

Reports two cases of toxigenic Vibrio cholerae O1 infection discovered in Louisiana after two hurricanes severely damaged and flooded the area. A brief summary on the background of Cholera is also included in the editorial note of this article.


Vibrio Illnesses After Hurricane Katrina --- Multiple States, August--September 2005

DHHS. CDC. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Review.

Reports cases of wound-associated and non-wound--associated Vibrio illnesses that occurred in multiple states between August and September 2005.