Descriptor English: | Arenaviridae | ||||||
Descriptor Spanish: |
Arenaviridae
| ||||||
Descriptor Portuguese: | Arenaviridae | ||||||
Descriptor French: | Arenaviridae | ||||||
Entry term(s): |
Mammarenavirus Mammarenaviruses Reptarenavirus Reptarenaviruses |
||||||
Tree number(s): |
B04.820.480.500 |
||||||
RDF Unique Identifier: | https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D001116 | ||||||
Scope note: | A family of RNA viruses naturally infecting rodents and consisting of one genus (ARENAVIRUS) with two groups: Old World Arenaviruses (ARENAVIRUSES, OLD WORLD) and New World Arenaviruses (ARENAVIRUSES, NEW WORLD). Infection in rodents is persistent and silent. Vertical transmission is through milk-, saliva-, or urine-borne routes. Horizontal transmission to humans, monkeys, and other animals is important. |
||||||
Annotation: | infection = ARENAVIRIDAE INFECTIONS |
||||||
Allowable Qualifiers: |
CH chemistry CL classification DE drug effects EN enzymology GD growth & development GE genetics IM immunology IP isolation & purification ME metabolism PH physiology PY pathogenicity RE radiation effects UL ultrastructure |
||||||
Previous Indexing: |
RNA Viruses (1966-1977) |
||||||
Public MeSH Note: | 81; was ARENAVIRUSES 1978-80 |
||||||
Online Note: | use ARENAVIRIDAE to search ARENAVIRUSES 1978-80 |
||||||
History Note: | 81; was ARENAVIRUSES 1978-80 |
||||||
DeCS ID: | 1119 | ||||||
Unique ID: | D001116 | ||||||
NLM Classification: | QW 168.5.A8 | ||||||
Documents indexed in the Virtual Health Library (VHL): | Click here to access the VHL documents | ||||||
Date Established: | 1978/01/01 | ||||||
Date of Entry: | 1977/05/04 | ||||||
Revision Date: | 2017/02/24 |
Arenaviridae
- Preferred
Reptarenavirus
- Narrower
Mammarenavirus
- Narrower
Concept UI |
M0001675 |
Scope note | A family of RNA viruses naturally infecting rodents and consisting of one genus (ARENAVIRUS) with two groups: Old World Arenaviruses (ARENAVIRUSES, OLD WORLD) and New World Arenaviruses (ARENAVIRUSES, NEW WORLD). Infection in rodents is persistent and silent. Vertical transmission is through milk-, saliva-, or urine-borne routes. Horizontal transmission to humans, monkeys, and other animals is important. |
Preferred term | Arenaviridae |
Concept UI |
M000622692 |
Preferred term | Reptarenavirus |
Entry term(s) |
Reptarenaviruses |
Concept UI |
M000622691 |
Preferred term | Mammarenavirus |
Entry term(s) |
Mammarenaviruses |
We want your feedback on the new DeCS / MeSH website
We invite you to complete a survey that will take no more than 3 minutes.
Go to survey