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infectious mononucleosis

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infectious mononucleosis

an acute infectious disease, caused by Epstein-Barr virus, characterized by fever, sore throat, swollen and painful lymph nodes, and abnormal lymphocytes in the blood
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

Infectious mononucleosis

A disease of children and young adults, characterized by fever and enlarged lymph nodes and spleen. EB (Epstein-Barr) herpesvirus is the causative agent.

Onset of the disease is slow and nonspecific with variable fever and malaise; later, cervical lymph nodes enlarge, and in about 50% of cases the spleen also becomes enlarged. The disease lasts 4–20 days or longer. Epidemics are common in institutions where young people live. EB virus infections occurring in early childhood are usually asymptomatic. In later childhood and adolescence, the disease more often accompanies infection—although even at these ages inapparent infections are common. See Epstein-Barr virus

McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Bioscience. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

infectious mononucleosis

[in′fek·shəs ‚män·ō‚nü·klē′ō·səs]
(medicine)
A disorder of unknown etiology characterized by irregular fever, pathology of lymph nodes, lymphocytosis, and high serum levels of heterophil antibodies against sheep erythrocytes. Also known as acute benign lymphoblastosis; glandular fever; kissing disease; lymphocytic angina; monocytic angina; Pfeiffer's disease.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Mononucleosis, Infectious

 

also monocytic angina, glandular fever, or Filatov’s disease (named for N. F. Filatov, who described it in 1885), an acute infectious disease accompanied by fever, sore throat, enlargement of the lymph nodes, and characteristic changes in blood composition. The agent is most likely a filterable virus pathogenic to humans and the Anthropoidea.

Infected individuals and healthy individuals that are carriers are the source of the disease, which is transmitted by airborne droplets through sneezing and coughing; children are most often affected. The virus penetrates the blood vessels through the mucosa of the respiratory tract, spreads through the bloodstream, and affects the lymph nodes. After an incubation period of six to 18 days, malaise sets in accompanied by fever and soreness of the throat upon swallowing. A thin coating appears on the tonsils. A characteristic sign of the disease is the enlargement of the cervical lymph nodes, which are not tender, are not matted to one another, and never suppurate. Sometimes there are rashes on the skin and mucosa, which are frequently caused by petechial hemorrhage; the liver and spleen are enlarged. A characteristic change in the blood is the increase in the number of leukocytes, among which are large numbers of mononuclear cells whose structure is similar to that of lymphocytes and monocytes. The fever lasts from a few days to three or four weeks. Most of those infected by the disease recover without complications. There is no specific treatment; patients are isolated during the entire course of the disease.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Stein, "Splenic infarction, warm autoimmune hemolytic anemia and antiphospholipid antibodies in a patient with infectious mononucleosis," International Journal of Hematology, vol.
Does this patient have infectious mononucleosis? The rational clinical examination systematic review.
Proliferation of mononuclear cells causes lymphadenopathy associated with infectious mononucleosis and can mimic other more serious underlying conditions, such as lymphoma.
Include infectious mononucleosis in the differential for patients presenting with vaginal ulcers--especially those who deny sexual activity.
However, based on the clinical syndrome of fever, exudative pharyngitis, and lymphocytosis, accompanied by positive EBV serology results, the diagnosis of a severe form of EBV infectious mononucleosis complicated by icteric hepatitis, skin vasculitis, and acalculous cholecystitis was considered.
The peculiarity of the case is the fact that after infectious mononucleosis associated with acute hepatitis the child has developed a symptomatic cystic duct stenosis, leading to vesicular hydrops and the necessity of surgical treatment.
In infectious mononucleosis, leukopenia, normal leukocyte count, lymphomonocytosis and 30% Downey cells (from the second week) may be observed.
Since the 1800s, infectious mononucleosis had been recognized as a clinical syndrome of fever, adenopathy and pharyngitis.
Infectious mononucleosis or glandular fever revisited.
Reactive lymphoid follicular hyperplasia, infectious mononucleosis, and nasopharyngeal carcinoma (nonkeratinizing type) need to be excluded histologically and/or immunophenotypically.
EBV IgM was positive (17.58 U [mL.sup.-1]) (normal: <8.00 U m[mL.sup.-1]) and HIV antibody testing was negative; thus, the diagnosis of infectious mononucleosis was confirmed.
Diseases that can mimic histological features of KFD include Yersinia, Toxoplasma, and Bartonella infections, infectious mononucleosis, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, Hodgkin's lymphoma,and lymph node infarction.8
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