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Microbiology, 2021

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CHAPTER 25<br />

Circulatory and Lymphatic<br />

System Infections<br />

Figure 25.1 Yellow fever is a viral hemorrhagic disease that can cause liver damage, resulting in jaundice (left) as<br />

well as serious and sometimes fatal complications. The virus that causes yellow fever is transmitted through the<br />

bite of a biological vector, the Aedes aegypti mosquito (right). (credit left: modification of work by Centers for<br />

Disease Control and Prevention; credit right: modification of work by James Gathany, Centers for Disease Control<br />

and Prevention)<br />

Chapter Outline<br />

25.1 Anatomy of the Circulatory and Lymphatic Systems<br />

25.2 Bacterial Infections of the Circulatory and Lymphatic Systems<br />

25.3 Viral Infections of the Circulatory and Lymphatic Systems<br />

25.4 Parasitic Infections of the Circulatory and Lymphatic Systems<br />

INTRODUCTION Yellow fever was once common in the southeastern US, with annual outbreaks of more than<br />

25,000 infections in New Orleans in the mid-1800s. 1 In the early 20th century, efforts to eradicate the virus<br />

that causes yellow fever were successful thanks to vaccination programs and effective control (mainly through<br />

the insecticide dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane [DDT]) of Aedes aegypti, the mosquito that serves as a vector.<br />

Today, the virus has been largely eradicated in North America.<br />

Elsewhere, efforts to contain yellow fever have been less successful. Despite mass vaccination campaigns in<br />

some regions, the risk for yellow fever epidemics is rising in dense urban cities in Africa and South America. 2<br />

In an increasingly globalized society, yellow fever could easily make a comeback in North America, where A.<br />

aegypti is still present. If these mosquitoes were exposed to infected individuals, new outbreaks would be<br />

possible.<br />

1 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “The History of Yellow Fever.” http://www.cdc.gov/travel-training/local/<br />

HistoryEpidemiologyandVaccination/page27568.html

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