|
 |
Infectious
Disease Information |
Index:
Illnesses, Conditions, Concerns, Programs
A
- D |
Acanthamoeba
infection
acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome
adenovirus
infection
Aedes
albopictus
Aedes
japonicus
mosquito
African
sleeping sickness
AHD
AIDS
alveolar
hydatid disease
amebiasis
American
trypanosomiasis
amnesic
shellfish poisoning
Ancylostoma infection
Angiostrongylus
infection
angiostrongyliasis
animal-borne
diseases
animal
care
Anisakis
infection
anisakiasis
anthrax
antibiotic resistance
antimicrobial resistance
antimicrobial
susceptibility testing educational resources (M.A.S.T.E.R.)
arboviral
encephalitis
arboviral
encephalitides
Arctic
Investigations Program
arenavirus
infections
ascariasis
ascarids
Ascaris
lumbricoides infection
aseptic
(viral) meningitis
Asian
mosquito
Aspergillus
infection
aspergillosis
astrovirus
infection
B
B.
cepacia
B
virus
Babesia
infection
babesiosis
Bacillus anthracis infection
Bacterial
and Mycotic Diseases, Division of
bacterial
diseases (listing)
bacterial
meningitis
balantidiasis
Balantidium
infection
Bartonella
henselae
infection
Baylisascaris
infection
Bayou virus infection
bilharzia
bioterrorism
birds,
pet (diseases people can get from them)
Black Creek Canal
virus infection
Blastocystis
hominis infection
blastomycosis
bleeding
disorders
body
lice
Bordetella pertussis infection
Borrelia
burgdorferi infection
botulism
bovine
spongiform encephalopathy
Brainerd
diarrhea
broad (fish) tapeworm infection
Brucella
infection
brucellosis
Brugia
malayi infection
Brugia
timori infection
BSE
Burkholderia
cepacia
Burkholderia
pseudomallei
C
calicivirus
infection
Campylobacter
infection
campylobacteriosis
Candida
infection
candidiasis
Capillaria
infection
capillariasis
Cat
scratch disease
cat flea
tapeworm infection
cats,
pet (diseases people can get from them)
C.
difficile infection
cercarial
dermatitis
Cercopithecine
herpesvirus
CFS
Chagas disease
chancroid
chickenpox
children
and infants (listing, common childhood diseases)
Chilomastix
mesnili infection
Chlamydia
infection
Chlamydia
pneumoniae infection
Chlamydia
psittaci infection
Chlamydia
trachomatis infection
cholera
chronic fatigue syndrome
Ciguatera
poisoning
CJD
CLM
Clonorchis
infection
clonorchiasis
Clostridium difficile infection
Clostridium botulinum infection
Clostridium tetani infection
CMV infection
Coccidioides
immitis infection
coccidioidomycosis
Corynebacterium
diphtheriae infection
covert
toxocariasis
Coxiella
burnetti
infection
Coxsackie
A and B virus infection
crabs
Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease
cryptococcosis
Cryptococcus neoformans infection
cryptosporidiosis
Cryptosporidium infection
CSD
Culex
mosquito
cutaneous larva migrans
Cyclospora
infection
cyclosporiasis
cysticercosis
cytomegalovirus infection
D
delusional
parasitosis
dengue
fever/dengue hemorrhagic fever
dengue
hemorrhagic fever/dengue fever
dengue
virus infection
diarrhea
diarrheagenic
Escherichia coli
Dientamoeba
fragilis infection
diphtheria
Diphyllobothrium
infection
diphyllobothriasis
Dipylidium
infection
disparities,
health (Office of Minority and Women's Health)
Division
of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases
Division
of Global Migration and Quarantine (formerly Division of Quarantine)
Division
of Healthcare Quality Promotion (formerly Hospital Infections Program)
Division
of Parasitic Diseases
Division
of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases
Division
of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases
dog flea
tapeworm infection
dogs,
pet (diseases people can get from them)
DPDx:
CDC Parasitology Diagnostic Web site (for laboratorians)
dracunculiasis
drinking
water safety
drug
resistance
Drug
Service, CDC
A
B C
D E
F G
H I
J K
L M
N O
P Q
R S
T U
V W
X Y Z
 |
NOTE:
CDC is not a hospital or clinical facility; we do not see patients and
are unable to diagnose your illness, provide treatment, prescribe medication,
or refer you to specialists.
If
you have a medical emergency, contacting CDC is not the proper way to
get immediate help. Instead, please contact your health care provider
or go to the nearest emergency room. If you are a health care provider,
please contact your state epidemiologist or local health department.
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
Medical
Emergency?
Please Read Below |
 |
NOTE:
CDC is not a hospital or clinical facility; we do not see patients and
are unable to diagnose your illness, provide treatment, prescribe medication,
or refer you to specialists.
If
you have a medical emergency, contacting CDC is not the proper way to
get immediate help. Instead, please contact your health care provider
or go to the nearest emergency room. If you are a health care provider,
please contact your state epidemiologist or local health department.
|
|
 |
 |
|
 |
Using
This Index |
Try
a disease name first.
If
you don't know the disease name, try a word for the animal, germ,
or situation (such as food or daycare) you're concerned about, because
we have heavily cross-indexed many diseases using more than one
term or keyword.
NCID
offers detailed information on a large variety of infectious illnesses.
However, because we aren't a medical encyclopedia, information is
not comprehensive on every disease and we do not offer information
on all diseases.
If
you're looking for technical-level information:
|
 |
 |
|
 |
Still
Can't Find Your Topic? |
We
can offer information only on diseases we work with. If you cannot
find your topic by disease name, disease agent, or carrier/vector,
consult the National Library of Medicine site:
Medline
References and abstracts from 4300 biomedical journals. Site
is outside CDC and opens in new window.
Medline
Plus
Health topics, drug information, medical dictionaries, more. Site
is outside CDC and opens in new window.
|
 |
 |
|
|
 |