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Autoinoculation

Disease Autoimmune thyroiditisAutomatic behavior

Autoinoculation Prevention
Review Date: 10/18/2008
Reviewed By: David C. Dugdale, III, MD, Professor of Medicine, Division of General Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine; and George F.

 


Autoinoculation
Reviewed last on: 10/18/2008
David C. Dugdale, III, MD, Professor of Medicine, Division of General Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine; and George F.

Autoinoculation
Autoinoculation
Autologous bone marrow transplant (Bone marrow transplant)
Automated perimetry exam (Visual field)
Automatic dishwasher soap poisoning
Automobile safety - teenage drivers (Safe driving for teens) ...

Spread may then occur by autoinoculation. Local and systemic immune factors appear to influence spread; ...

Because the rash can spread by autoinoculation (spread from one part of the body to another by touching the lesions), avoid scratching the lesions.

People with this skin disease can cause the bumps to spread to different parts of their body. This is called autoinoculation. Such spread can occur by touching or scratching a bump and then touching another part of the body.

Sometimes, infected people can transmit the virus and infect other parts of their own bodies (most often the hands, thighs, or buttocks). This process, known as autoinoculation, is uncommon, ...

Autoerythrocyte sensitivity
Autoimmune disorders
Autoimmune hepatitis
Autoimmune liver disease panel
Autoinoculation ...

(the epidermis) caused by a virus. The virus of warts (a papillomavirus) is transmitted by contact. The contact can be with a wart on someone else or one on oneself (autoinoculation).

Warts are caused by infection with the human papillomavirus, a group of ether-resistant, deoxyribonucleic acid-containing papovaviruses. The mode of transmission is probably through direct contact, but autoinoculation is possible.

A person who has warts on their hands, for example, can spread the infection to other areas of their own body (autoinoculation) by scratching. The incubation period varies from one to 12 months, depending on the type of virus.

Autoinoculation
Automatic dishwasher soap - poisoning
Autonomic hyperreflexia
Autonomic neuropathy
Autosomal dominant
Autosomal recessive
Avian influenza
Avoidant personality disorder
Axillary nerve dysfunction ...

See also: Cancer, Surgery, Symptom, HIV, Molluscum contagiosum

Disease Autoimmune thyroiditisAutomatic behavior

 
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