Anthrax (cont.)
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Multimedia
Media file 1: Microscopic picture of anthrax. Image courtesy of AVIP agency, Office of the Army Surgeon General, US.
Media type: Photo
Media file 2: Cutaneous (skin) anthrax. Picture courtesy of AVIP agency, Office of the Army Surgeon General, US.

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

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

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.

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.

Media type: Acrobat PDF
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Anthrax was described in the early literature of the Greeks, Romans, and Hindus.

