Examples of speculative fever in the following topics:
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- The financial crisis of 1837 was based on speculative fever and contributed to a five-year economic depression.
- The Panic of 1837 was a financial crisis, or market correction, driven by speculative fever.
- These speculative investments were frequently made with borrowed funds, resulting in large-scale cycles of boom and bust in the early 1800s.
- The tremendous growth in the agricultural sector in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries encouraged land speculation, or the purchasing of land with the expectation that its value would continue to increase.
- However, Jacksonian Democrats argued that the Bank had funded rampant speculation and introduced paper-money inflation, and was therefore chiefly responsible for the crisis.
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- Speculators often add to this upward pressure by purchasing shares in the expectation they will be able to sell them later to other buyers at even higher prices.
- When speculative fever can no longer be sustained, prices start to fall.
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- The Market Revolution produced an upsurge in speculative investments, which resulted in periods of economic boom and bust.
- These speculative investments were frequently made with borrowed funds, resulting in large-scale cycles of boom and bust in the early 1800s.
- The tremendous growth in the agricultural sector in the late 18th and early 19th centuries encouraged land speculation, or the purchasing of land with the expectation that its value would continue to increase.
- In 1837, the nation once again faced a financial crisis as a result of the speculative fever of the Market Revolution, known as the Panic of 1837.
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- An overactive immune response is often seen in individuals with allergies and hay-fever, specifically in developed countries where parasites have been under strict prevention and control.
- It is speculated that parasitic worms have the ability to damp down the immune system, which promotes an environment where they can thrive without being attached.
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- Vaccines carry risks, ranging from rashes or tenderness at the site of injection to fever-associated seizures.
- Vaccines carry risks, ranging from rashes or tenderness at the site of injection to fever-associated seizures called febrile convulsions and dangerous infections in those with compromised immune systems.
- Some speculate that children with metabolic disorders might be prone to vaccine side effects.
- These include current smallpox vaccines that cannot safely be given to immunocompromised people; the tuberculosis vaccine, which is not recommended for HIV-positive infants; and the yellow-fever vaccine, which puts elderly people at particular risk of a yellow-fever-like illness.
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- It was made worse, however, by land speculation and poor banking practices at home.
- Many Americans were struck with “land fever.”
- Speculators took advantage of this boom in the sale of land by purchasing property not to live on, but to buy cheaply and resell at exorbitant prices.
- But this new institution only compounded the problem by making risky loans, opening branches in the South and West where land fever was highest, and issuing a steady stream of Bank of the United States notes, a move that increased inflation and speculation.
- Land speculators lost the value of their investments.
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- All types of VHF are characterized by fever and bleeding disorders and all can progress to high fever, shock and death in many cases.
- The family Arenaviridae include the viruses responsible for Lassa fever, Lujo virus, Argentine, Bolivian, Brazilian and Venezuelan hemorrhagic fevers.
- The family Flaviviridae include dengue, yellow fever , and two viruses in the tick-borne encephalitis group that cause VHF: Omsk hemorrhagic fever virus and Kyasanur Forest disease virus.
- Signs and symptoms of VHFs include fever and bleeding diathesis.
- The only licensed vaccine available is for yellow fever.
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- A fever can be caused by many conditions ranging from benign to potentially serious.
- Fevers are helpful in fighting infections, but can also cause damage in the body.
- Treatments for severe fevers include antipyrogens and aspirin, which also helps to stop blood clots that may coincide with severe fever.
- High fevers (more than 104 degrees Fahrenheit) are a symptom of severe infections.
- Performance of the various types of fever: a) Fever continues b) Fever continues to abrupt onset and remission c) Fever remittent d) Intermittent fever e) Undulant fever f) Relapsing fever
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- Scarlet fever is caused by a bacteriophage that infects Streptococcus pyogenes.
- Scarlet fever is an infectious disease which most commonly affects 4-8 year-old children.
- Symptoms include sore throat, fever, and a characteristic red rash .
- Scarlet fever is caused by secretion of pyrogenic (fever inducing) exotoxins by the infected Streptococcus.
- The rosy cheeks and white area around the mouth are typical symptoms of scarlet fever.
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- Typhoid fever, also known as typhoid, is a common, worldwide bacterial disease.
- The disease has been known by many names, such as gastric fever, abdominal typhus, infantile remittant fever, slow fever, nervous fever or pythogenic (originating from filth or putrefaction) fever.
- This delirium gives typhoid its nickname of "nervous fever".
- Typhoid fever in most cases is not fatal.
- Summarize the four stages of untreated typhoid fever and methods of preventing it