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Anthrax (cont.)

Multimedia

Media file 1: Microscopic picture of anthrax. Image courtesy of AVIP agency, Office of the Army Surgeon General, US.
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Media type:  Photo

Media file 2: Cutaneous (skin) anthrax. Picture courtesy of AVIP agency, Office of the Army Surgeon General, US.
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Media type:  Photo

Media file 3: Skin lesion of anthrax on face. Picture courtesy of the Public Health Image Library, CDC, Atlanta, Georgia.
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Media type:  Photo

Media file 4: Skin lesions of anthrax on neck. Picture courtesy of the Public Health Image Library, CDC, Atlanta, Georgia.
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Media type:  Photo

Media file 5: Chest x-ray showing widened chest cavity resulting from inhalation anthrax. Image courtesy of Dr. P.S. Brachman, Public Health Image Library, CDC, Atlanta, Georgia.
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Media type:  X-RAY

Media file 6: Bioterrorist Agents. Signs and symptoms to watch for. Chart courtesy of North Carolina Statewide Program for Infection Control and Epidemiology (SPICE), copyright University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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Media type:  Acrobat PDF



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Anthrax »

Anthrax was described in the early literature of the Greeks, Romans, and Hindus.

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