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  1. Symptoms can include fever, sores, and swollen lymph nodes. Cultures of tissue samples or blood help doctors make the diagnosis. Injections of antibiotics are almost always effective. Preventing tick bites, handling carcasses carefully, and disinfecting water can reduce the risk of tularemia. (See also Overview of Bacteria.) Transmission

  2. 13 de sept. de 2022 · Fever is a defense mechanism against threatening health factors, especially infections, in which the body raises its temperature to make reproduction more difficult for pathogens. The most common infections in rabbits that can cause fever are: Viral hemorrhagic disease: viral hemorrhagic disease is caused by a calicivirus.Although the incubation period is up to three days, animals may die ...

  3. 14 de may. de 2020 · Tularemia, aka ‘rabbit fever’: A rare disease and potential bioweapon. Tularemia is a zoonotic disease caused by Francisella tularensis, an aerobic gram-negative coccobacillus. Francisella are ...

  4. 3 de dic. de 2015 · Rabbit Fever on the Rise in the US, CDC Says. A surge in cases of a serious but rare bacterial disease called rabbit fever in four U.S. states has doctors puzzled. Over the past two decades, about ...

  5. When it enters through the skin, tularemia can be recognized by the presence of a skin lesion and swollen glands. Ingestion of the organism may produce a throat infection, intestinal pain, diarrhea and vomiting. Inhalation of the organism may produce a fever alone or fever combined with a pneumonia-like illness.

  6. 12 de sept. de 2012 · Rabbit Fever: Directed by Amy Do. With Holly Anderson, Jenna Anderson, Skylar Anderson, Mike Avesing. You've heard of dog and horse shows, but are you familiar with the fascinating world of rabbit showing? For the first time ever, this 100-year-old society is revealed. Rabbit Fever follows a colorful collection of competitors as they strive to win the top title at the 2005 National American ...

  7. Tularemia (Rabbit Fever) Tularemia (also known as "rabbit fever" and "deer fly fever") is a disease that was first recognized as a plague-like disease of rodents in 1911 in Tulare, California. It is caused by a highly infectious bacterium that is widespread "in nature," occurring in a variety of wild animals, in water, and even in soil.