¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Encephalitides
1. encephalitis [n] - See also: encephalitis
Lexicographical Neighbors of Encephalitides
Literary usage of Encephalitides
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A New Guide to the Collections in the Library of the American Philosophical by J. Stephen Catlett (1987)
"(B/OL 1) Consists chiefly of materials relating to his work in developing vaccines
for various viruses and bacteria — encephalitides, typhus, rickettsioses, ..."
2. Diseases of the nervous system: A Text-book of Neurology and Psychiatry by Smith Ely Jelliffe, William Alanson White (1917)
"... cerebral sclerosis and gliosis, cerebral arteriosclerosis, the encephalitides and
... of an overwhelming toxemia or by meningitides or encephalitides. ..."
3. The Oxford Medicine by Henry Asbury Christian, James Mackenzie (1920)
"... into the picture of encephalopathies not of mumps origin that the activation
of other latent encephalitides through the mumps virus is suggested. ..."
4. Monographic Medicine by William Robie Patten Emerson, Guido Guerrini, William Brown, Wendell Christopher Phillips, John Whitridge Williams, John Appleton Swett, Hans Günther, Mario Mariotti, Hugh Grant Rowell (1916)
"Rothmann calls attention to this frequent favorable behavior of influenza
hemorrhagic encephalitides. In cases which live, in which during the acute or ..."
5. The American Journal of Insanity by New York (State). State Lunatic Asylum (1906)
"The latter, which is practically a negligible quantity in normal conditions, is
increased in appreciable amount in various meningo-encephalitides, ..."
6. Biosafety in the Laboratory: Prudent Practices for the Handling and Disposal by National Research Council (U. S.) (1989)
"... Use In Disease Rubella Tuberculosis Tularemia Typhoid Venezuelan Equine and
Related encephalitides (VEE) Western Equine Encephalo- myelitis (WEE) Yellow ..."
7. Nervous and Mental Diseases by Archibald Church, Frederick Peterson (1919)
"All of these polio-encephalitides are analogous to the spinal form or identical
with it and often clinically associated. ..."