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1 ound that correlated with symptomatic versus asymptomatic infection.
2 om Montenegro skin tests of individuals with asymptomatic infection.
3 reservoir of infection, including those with asymptomatic infection.
4  a rapidly progressive course to a long-term asymptomatic infection.
5 ammatory disease, and most commonly, chronic asymptomatic infection.
6 57BL/6 mice, in contrast, is more similar to asymptomatic infection.
7  7 times, respectively, more infectious than asymptomatic infection.
8                    A total of 51 (22.6%) had asymptomatic infection.
9 f virus-host interactions during the initial asymptomatic infection.
10 B cell development to persist as a life-long asymptomatic infection.
11  in areas where it is endemic it is often an asymptomatic infection.
12 d may down-regulate viral replication during asymptomatic infection.
13 ole in eliminating virus and maintaining the asymptomatic infection.
14 nfection was classified as either disease or asymptomatic infection.
15 tal leukemia and the other, RH/K30, mediates asymptomatic infection.
16 t in bacteria isolated from individuals with asymptomatic infection.
17 erging virus variants and a longer period of asymptomatic infection.
18 negative and in those patients who developed asymptomatic infection.
19  to sustained transmission due to persistent asymptomatic infection.
20 7 individuals (66.3%) were estimated to have asymptomatic infection.
21 kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis, and 184 with asymptomatic infection.
22 ion of cases with typical, mild/atypical, or asymptomatic infection.
23 SARS-CoV-2-uninfected children or those with asymptomatic infection.
24 culating antibodies to SARS-CoV-2, even with asymptomatic infection.
25 ssociation was lower or absent after mild or asymptomatic infection.
26 eason, suggesting antigenic switching during asymptomatic infection.
27  identified seroconverters, most of whom had asymptomatic infection.
28 ced by Clothianidin in honey bees bearing an asymptomatic infection.
29  not preventing transmission from staff with asymptomatic infection.
30 rials for diseases with a high proportion of asymptomatic infection.
31 erculosis (Mtb) characteristically causes an asymptomatic infection.
32 ion during any trimester and can result from asymptomatic infection.
33 hin a certain radius of detection, targeting asymptomatic infection.
34 date and highlight the significant burden of asymptomatic infection.
35 peptic ulcers or gastric cancer, rather than asymptomatic infection.
36 nfidence interval [CI], 17.9%-46.1%) against asymptomatic infection.
37  may enable simple and accurate detection of asymptomatic infection.
38 isms by CPT status were also assessed in the asymptomatic infections.
39 cination and symptomatic infections, but not asymptomatic infections.
40 t could benefit from increased screening for asymptomatic infections.
41 y play a role in determining symptomatic and asymptomatic infections.
42 ions in the cohort overestimated the rate of asymptomatic infections.
43  healthy piglets, reflecting a high level of asymptomatic infections.
44  combination of the presymptomatic stage and asymptomatic infections.
45 e peripheral blood of PM-positive women with asymptomatic infections.
46                           Many patients have asymptomatic infections.
47 hese positives included both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections.
48 oad host range and typically causes chronic, asymptomatic infections.
49 and is known to be able to cause persistent, asymptomatic infections.
50  ongoing envelope variation during long-term asymptomatic infections.
51 12 and 20 months after study entry to detect asymptomatic infections.
52 cute FIV infections, as well as in long-term asymptomatic infections.
53 s reported cases for under-ascertainment and asymptomatic infections.
54 ld increases and were classified as probable asymptomatic infections.
55 fectious period, including for pediatric and asymptomatic infections.
56 of the microbiota, leading to symptomatic or asymptomatic infections.
57 ns at risk of infection, enabling capture of asymptomatic infections.
58 hospitalized to 11.0% among 308 persons with asymptomatic infections.
59 a infections, with more prolonged impacts on asymptomatic infections.
60  disease, characterized by persistent, often asymptomatic, infection.
61 jects (29.8%) developed 218 CMV episodes (90 asymptomatic infection, 25 syndrome, and 103 disease).
62 ons with symptomatic infection compared with asymptomatic infection (2708 of 20,735 days [13.1%; 95%
63 8 (HHV-8) antibody assays for application to asymptomatic infection, a blinded comparison was done of
64  authors estimated a very low probability of asymptomatic infection, a previously unknown parameter f
65 viduals living in endemic regions as well as asymptomatic infections, a serious barrier to eliminatin
66 or symptomatic Plasmodium infection) and, in asymptomatic infection, according to host age and parasi
67                                              Asymptomatic infections accounted for 81.3% of cases, wh
68 hy volunteers with mild cryptosporidiosis or asymptomatic infection after experimental C. parvum chal
69 ymptomatic infections and from neonates with asymptomatic infections, also contained one or more posi
70 escribe the frequency of mild, atypical, and asymptomatic infection among household contacts of pertu
71 ent surveillance efforts are missing mild or asymptomatic infections among avian-exposed persons.
72 fied, excess tests to proactively screen for asymptomatic infections among household members yield th
73 ivity rates and find a fourfold reduction in asymptomatic infection amongst HCWs 12 days post-vaccina
74 irus (HIV) infection, 11 had newly diagnosed asymptomatic infection and 9 had acute symptomatic HIV.
75 es are scarce but include several reports of asymptomatic infection and a milder course of disease in
76  have found that the same SPFL strains cause asymptomatic infection and chronic renal shedding in rat
77 ologic changes in the brain during acute and asymptomatic infection and during viral recrudescence an
78                  Because of their continuous asymptomatic infection and longer stay in the markets, p
79 0/41 HAdV species have a higher frequency of asymptomatic infection and may not necessarily explain g
80 community transmission, but the frequency of asymptomatic infection and post-influenza sequelae at th
81 tions with each strain was similar, although asymptomatic infection and viral coinfection was signifi
82                                We identified asymptomatic infections and evaluated the associations b
83 nd pharyngeal exposure sites that can harbor asymptomatic infections and for MSM in Southeast states
84 een difficult in sub-Saharan Africa owing to asymptomatic infections and inadequate testing capacity.
85 to estimate the temporal association between asymptomatic infections and malaria illness episodes.
86 valuated the associations between persistent asymptomatic infections and malaria illness.
87 s increasing interest in the significance of asymptomatic infections and the optimal diagnostic test
88               The ability of hosts to harbor asymptomatic infections and the stability of asymptomati
89 nancy, as well as at delivery, in women with asymptomatic infections and those who remained uninfecte
90 acy for common outcomes (ie, symptomatic and asymptomatic infections) and a Bayesian random-effects m
91  strains isolated from human volunteers with asymptomatic infection, and the genomes of two output st
92                               If people with asymptomatic infection are infectious it could explain r
93 changes that distinguish this condition from asymptomatic infection are not well understood.
94                                              Asymptomatic infections are a major source of malaria tr
95                                              Asymptomatic infections are also common.
96                                              Asymptomatic infections are infrequent.
97                                              Asymptomatic infections are potentially important reserv
98                     Although symptomatic and asymptomatic infections are recognized, protective immun
99                                However, many asymptomatic infections are submicroscopic and can only
100  the mechanisms underlying disease caused by asymptomatic infections are unknown, it is believed that
101            Data on all infections, including asymptomatic infections, are needed.
102                                In those with asymptomatic infection, ART usually effectively suppress
103 ands, along with 60 subjects with a previous asymptomatic infection as controls.
104 the onset of overt clinical symptoms (or via asymptomatic infection) as the inherent transmissibility
105                 In contrast, females cleared asymptomatic infections at a faster rate than males (haz
106 ials for pathogens with a high proportion of asymptomatic infection, because such infections may cont
107 , 53%-81%) relative reduction in the risk of asymptomatic infection between 6 and 36 weeks of age.
108 s a common herpesvirus that typically causes asymptomatic infection but can lead to severe complicati
109 ubiquitous herpesvirus that typically causes asymptomatic infection but can promote B lymphoid tumors
110 ection was higher than effectiveness against asymptomatic infection but waned similarly.
111     Clinical immunity to malaria can lead to asymptomatic infection, but the underlying mechanisms re
112            There are limited data on mild or asymptomatic infections, but recognition of these indivi
113 us 2 (SARS-CoV-2) have predominantly mild or asymptomatic infections, but the underlying immunologica
114 on calculated by dividing incidence rates of asymptomatic infection by rates of any infection, clinic
115 uman population and normally contained as an asymptomatic infection by T cell surveillance, neverthel
116                             Although usually asymptomatic, infection can result in a mild and self-li
117 es a spectrum of conditions from preclinical asymptomatic infection (cerebrospinal fluid [CSF] CrAg-n
118  immunodeficiency virus (HIV) causes a long, asymptomatic infection characterized by normal to elevat
119 e increasingly important to track latent and asymptomatic infections, check the individual's immune s
120 ndary attack rate in contacts of people with asymptomatic infection compared with symptomatic infecti
121 mydia is variable and may include persisting asymptomatic infection, complications, or spontaneous re
122                                              Asymptomatic infections comprised 96.4% of all malaria i
123 iratory syncytial virus (RSV) and rhinovirus asymptomatic infection confer a substantial increase in
124  + beta lo phenotype expanded throughout the asymptomatic infection, constituting 80%-90% of the CD8
125  for malaria control and eradication because asymptomatic infections contribute significantly to Plas
126                                              Asymptomatic infections contribute substantially to herd
127 tory, and mathematical data, we propose that asymptomatic infections contribute to transmission throu
128          A key unknown for SARS-CoV-2 is how asymptomatic infections contribute to transmission.
129                  The low prevalence suggests asymptomatic infection contributes little to herd immuni
130                                              Asymptomatic infection could present a major challenge f
131 nt lymphocytes in the brain during acute and asymptomatic infection; cytotoxic T lymphocytes and NK c
132 mained at constant levels from acute through asymptomatic infection, despite significant down-regulat
133                               Smear-positive asymptomatic infections detectable by microscopy are an
134     Although feline infections are typically asymptomatic, infection during human pregnancy can cause
135                                      Whether asymptomatic infections eventually progress to malaria i
136           As no well-accepted definition for asymptomatic infection exists, 3 algorithms were evaluat
137 arying pathogenicity in humans, ranging from asymptomatic infections for Reston virus (RESTV) to seve
138 d 22 healthcare workers with mild disease or asymptomatic infection, for autoantibodies against 2,770
139 2 cases along with data on the prevalence of asymptomatic infection from published systematic reviews
140 s was less severe: On average, children with asymptomatic infection gained 162 g less (95% confidence
141 bias may therefore exist, with mild cases or asymptomatic infections going undetected.
142 vs 4.2 [interquartile range, 2.9-5.5] in the asymptomatic infection group, P = .27).
143                                              Asymptomatic infections had a significantly higher mean
144                                     However, asymptomatic infection has also been reported, highlight
145  young children; a substantial prevalence of asymptomatic infection has been reported across all age
146                             Individuals with asymptomatic infection have exhibited T cell responses a
147 llow identification of the infectiousness of asymptomatic infections, however low ranges (0-25%) requ
148 ime-point, several contacts appeared to have asymptomatic infection; however, over time all developed
149 body levels are also higher in children with asymptomatic infections (i.e., those with a degree of cl
150 ibe five prospectively studied patients with asymptomatic infections identified in a seroepidemiologi
151             W7-791 produced only a transient asymptomatic infection in adult and neonatal mice even a
152 om African green monkeys (SIVagm) results in asymptomatic infection in its natural host species.
153  be transmitted by mosquito bite, leading to asymptomatic infection in mice with compromised dissemin
154                 West Nile virus (WNV) causes asymptomatic infection in most humans, but for undefined
155 rium tuberculosis can result in lifelong but asymptomatic infection in most individuals.
156  lethal infection in guinea pigs and chronic asymptomatic infection in rats.
157 histoplasmosis or undiagnosed and presumably asymptomatic infection in the donor that had not resolve
158 avirus that commonly establishes persistent, asymptomatic infection in the general population.
159  viruses of the skin usually associated with asymptomatic infection in the general population.
160 nth 13 to month 25) as a surrogate marker of asymptomatic infection in the vaccine and placebo groups
161 NO concentration is discussed in relation to asymptomatic infection in women.
162 nd temporal analysis of malaria episodes and asymptomatic infections in four villages undergoing MDA
163 ause a variety of mild to severe symptoms or asymptomatic infections in humans and animals.
164 s but has yet only been associated with rare asymptomatic infections in humans.
165 ids during acute disease episodes and during asymptomatic infections in long-term inapparent carriers
166 al disease, HeV and NiVs caused only mild or asymptomatic infections in macaques.
167                            Newly febrile and asymptomatic infections in Malians were statistically in
168 (BKV) establishes persistent, low-level, and asymptomatic infections in most humans and causes polyom
169 s highlights a potentially important role of asymptomatic infections in the community transmission of
170 ore work is needed to understand the role of asymptomatic infections in transmission leading to rotav
171 nd that, as the relative transmissibility of asymptomatic infection increases, a second wave is more
172 ce, and a three years extension of untreated asymptomatic infection, increasing opportunities for tim
173           Chronic, low-density, multispecies asymptomatic infection is a successful biological adapta
174 rstanding the prevalence and distribution of asymptomatic infection is essential for targeted interve
175 presence of a healthy immune response; thus, asymptomatic infection is largely uncharacterized.
176 w parasite carriage in Plasmodium falciparum asymptomatic infection is required for the maintenance o
177 ntly, we argue that active case-detection of asymptomatic infections is a critical component of an ef
178                                              Asymptomatic infection may be associated with subclinica
179                                   SARS-CoV-2 asymptomatic infections may play a critical role in dise
180            Human Babesia infection can cause asymptomatic infection, mild to moderate disease, or sev
181    This test has the potential for detecting asymptomatic infection, monitoring the response to thera
182  aRR, 1.17 [95% CI, 1.07-1.28]), but mild or asymptomatic infection (n = 1766) was not significantly
183 though reservoir hosts experience persistent asymptomatic infection, numerous rodent-borne orthohanta
184                                              Asymptomatic infections occur; the most common symptom o
185                                              Asymptomatic infections occurred among 7% (95% CI, 3%-12
186                                              Asymptomatic infection occurs for numerous respiratory v
187 re, by different strategies, we describe the asymptomatic infection of human lymphoid organs by IAV i
188 iciency virus (SIV) is known to result in an asymptomatic infection of its natural African monkey hos
189 y early in life and carried thereafter as an asymptomatic infection of the B lymphoid system.
190 ular parasite that establishes a persistent, asymptomatic infection of the central nervous system (CN
191 erica serovar Typhi can establish a chronic, asymptomatic infection of the human gallbladder, suggest
192 ptomatic, yielding a ratio of symptomatic to asymptomatic infections of 1:0.97 (95% CI, 1:0.56, 1:1.6
193 8 serum specimens from patients with chronic asymptomatic infection, of whom 19 had congenital infect
194                                              Asymptomatic infections often proceed undetected, yet ca
195 ransmission model to investigate the role of asymptomatic infection on the likelihood of observing a
196 ota may help explain the observed effects of asymptomatic infections on growth in early life.
197 m laboratories working with SARS CoV, or are asymptomatic infections ongoing in human beings?
198 irus 71 or coxsackievirus A16 and results in asymptomatic infection or mild disease.
199 health strategies to manage individuals with asymptomatic infection or mild illness.
200 ing that LASV may frequently cause pauci- or asymptomatic infections or be commonly misdiagnosed for
201 asymptomatic infections and the stability of asymptomatic infections over time warrants investigation
202  so we did not estimate a mean proportion of asymptomatic infections overall (interquartile range (IQ
203 .4%; 95% CI, 11.2%-23.9%) among persons with asymptomatic infection (P < .001).
204 0.2%; 95% CI, 7.7%-13.6%) in 88 persons with asymptomatic infection (P < .001).
205 ence in the viral load of symptomatic versus asymptomatic infections (P = 0.62 and 0.74 for E and RdR
206  genotype was more common among infants with asymptomatic infections (P=.004), but geographic locatio
207 r whether sickle trait also protects against asymptomatic infection (parasitemia).
208                                     Multiple asymptomatic infections per symptomatic tree, incomplete
209 , may be involved in the mechanisms by which asymptomatic infections, persistence, and increased anti
210 applied to endemic diseases or ones in which asymptomatic infection plays a role, for which additiona
211 disease phenotypes: (i) symptomatic VL, (ii) asymptomatic infection (positive delayed-type hypersensi
212                                         When asymptomatic infections preceded malaria illness, newly-
213 in Ebola and Marburg hemorrhagic fevers, and asymptomatic infection predominates in yellow fever and
214                                              Asymptomatic infection presents a further challenge rega
215 mate SARS-CoV-2 prevalence in settings where asymptomatic infections prevail.
216 6% from the low to high R0 settings, whereas asymptomatic infection prevalence was lower in this age
217                               During chronic asymptomatic infection prior to simian AIDS, SIV-produci
218 sed on severe illness in COVID-19, examining asymptomatic infection provides a unique opportunity to
219 ment to 75% of all infected cases, including asymptomatic infections (R0 2.5), averted 35.9 million c
220                                 Because many asymptomatic infections remain undiagnosed and most diag
221 , yet the natural history of this frequently asymptomatic infection remains poorly understood.
222 8.3% (27.9-85.7%) VE against symptomatic and asymptomatic infection, respectively.
223 d with diverse clinical syndromes, including asymptomatic infection, respiratory illness, gastroenter
224             However, the point prevalence of asymptomatic infection rose sharply from 3% to 48% from
225            Malaria parasites associated with asymptomatic infections seem to result in increased TNFR
226 associated with stable lymphocyte levels and asymptomatic infection such as is observed in non-progre
227 s and leukocyte NOS2 in healthy controls and asymptomatic infection suggest that increased NO synthes
228 positivity in cabinmates of individuals with asymptomatic infections suggest that triage by symptom s
229 uires months to resolve or as an essentially asymptomatic infection that can reactivate several years
230               Most individuals experience an asymptomatic infection that is effectively controlled by
231 with recurring disease cycles to a long-term asymptomatic infection that is maintained indefinitely.
232 the NYC outbreak, indicating the presence of asymptomatic infections that could contribute to ongoing
233 lso conceivably leading to chains of mild or asymptomatic infections that generate widespread immunit
234 ctive study of susceptibility to clinical or asymptomatic infection, the levels of anti-GPI antibodie
235                                After initial asymptomatic infection, the virus establishes lifelong p
236 on of immunocompetent hamsters results in an asymptomatic infection; the only lethal disease model fo
237 enance of long-term viability during latent, asymptomatic infections, these results establish a role
238 wide range of disease severity, ranging from asymptomatic infection to a life-threating illness, part
239 a spectrum of clinical disease, ranging from asymptomatic infection to acute febrile illnesses with s
240  asymptomatic dengue infections and estimate asymptomatic infection to clinical case ratios over time
241              The progression and timing from asymptomatic infection to cryptococcal meningitis is unc
242                    Manifestations range from asymptomatic infection to disseminated visceral disease.
243 s a broad clinical presentation ranging from asymptomatic infection to fatal disease.
244 diverse clinical presentations, ranging from asymptomatic infection to fatal respiratory failure, and
245 k-borne disease that ranges in severity from asymptomatic infection to fatal sepsis.
246 ction are highly heterogeneous, ranging from asymptomatic infection to lethal coronavirus disease 201
247 -2, has a variable presentation ranging from asymptomatic infection to life-threatening acute respira
248  2 ends of a spectrum of states ranging from asymptomatic infection to overt disease.
249 anifestations of COVID-19 vary, ranging from asymptomatic infection to respiratory failure.
250 x, and the clinical presentation ranges from asymptomatic infection to severe and fatal disease.
251 m of disease outcomes in humans ranging from asymptomatic infection to severe disease or death.
252 d a range of clinical disease outcomes, from asymptomatic infection to severe weight loss, ocular and
253  results still highlight the possibility for asymptomatic infection to slow down progress towards eli
254 ents may be used to prevent progression from asymptomatic infection to symptomatic disease and to red
255 hat cause a spectrum of disease ranging from asymptomatic infection to systemic extragastrointestinal
256 ase whose clinical manifestations range from asymptomatic infections to a severe disease.
257 , and the contribution of submicroscopic and asymptomatic infections to its persistence is poorly und
258 ination accelerator, but the contribution of asymptomatic infections to malaria transmission has been
259 sentations in children, ranging from mild or asymptomatic infections to severe sepsis-like presentati
260 ted disease severity ranging from apparently asymptomatic infections to severe, viral hemorrhagic fev
261         Enterovirus infections can vary from asymptomatic infections to those with a mild fever and b
262 ip outbreak, to quantify the contribution of asymptomatic infections to transmission.
263 y (trial 202) and 119 received maribavir for asymptomatic infection (trial 203).
264  132 months with varying malaria phenotypes (asymptomatic infection, uncomplicated, and severe malari
265 levels of virus replication during long-term asymptomatic infection, varying from undetectable to 10(
266           Here we show that in five cases of asymptomatic infection, viral loads in the blood were as
267 months 4 to 9, vaccine efficacy (VE) against asymptomatic infection was 51.1% (95% CI, 30.4%-65.6%),
268    The efficacy of the vaccine in preventing asymptomatic infection was 83 percent in the first year
269             In conclusion, active control of asymptomatic infection was associated with and likely co
270 imate of 17.9%, was the only virus for which asymptomatic infection was detected.
271                                              Asymptomatic infection was not associated with adverse o
272  a protracted time-to death compared to i.m. Asymptomatic infection was observed in survivors with li
273 rstanding of the apparent high prevalence of asymptomatic infection, we analyzed a dynamic transmissi
274 n (HLA) loci may underly processes mediating asymptomatic infection, we enrolled 29,947 individuals,
275                Compared to being uninfected, asymptomatic infections were associated with an increase
276                                   Persistent asymptomatic infections were associated with decreased r
277                                              Asymptomatic infections were detected during 23% of visi
278 ions were of much shorter duration; 55.7% of asymptomatic infections were detected only once.
279  symptomatic infections and 20 neonates with asymptomatic infections were determined by Sanger and ne
280 abundance in the population, symptomatic and asymptomatic infections were estimated to contribute to
281 ions were not persistently asymptomatic, and asymptomatic infections were less infectious than sympto
282                                     However, asymptomatic infections were not associated with an incr
283                        Interestingly, higher asymptomatic infections were observed in the Caribbean c
284  syndromes produced by WNV infection include asymptomatic infection, West Nile Fever, and West Nile n
285 xpression was suppressed in the lungs during asymptomatic infection, when no correlation existed with
286     Strongyloides stercoralis causes chronic asymptomatic infections which can be maintained in the h
287 tools are not widely available for detecting asymptomatic infection, which can be 4 to 20 times more
288                     Given current protocols, asymptomatic infection with blood parasites may be diagn
289                                              Asymptomatic infection with Ebola virus could contribute
290                             The frequency of asymptomatic infection with Ebola virus is unclear: prev
291 w highly specific and sensitive assay showed asymptomatic infection with Ebola virus was uncommon des
292 week-old mice, dsTE12Q infection resulted in asymptomatic infection with lower CNS virus titers and u
293 haracterised by similar high rates of mainly asymptomatic infection with most symptomatic cases self-
294                              Symptomatic and asymptomatic infection with the diarrheal pathogen enter
295                                              Asymptomatic infections with nonhuman primate malaria pa
296     Secretors comprised all 155 cases and 21 asymptomatic infections with the most prevalent noroviru
297             Normal mice developed a chronic, asymptomatic infection, with rapid induction of mRNAs fo
298 alaria and more sustained protection against asymptomatic infections, with no difference in parasitem
299  (JCPyV) establishes a persistent, lifelong, asymptomatic infection within the kidney of the majority
300 the need to quantify the transmissibility of asymptomatic infections, without which the overall attac

 
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