<p>Part 1 - CLINICAL PRACTICE IN THE TROPICS - all editors</p> <p>Section A: ORGAN-BASED CHAPTERS </p> <p>1. Tropical Lung Diseases</p> <p>2. Cardiovascular Diseases</p> <p> 3. Gastrointestinal Diseases</p> <p>4. Hepatobiliary Diseases</p> <p>5. Hematologic Diseases</p> <p>6. Genitourinary Diseases</p> <p>7. Sexually Transmitted Infections</p> <p>8. Tropical Dermatology</p> <p>9. Ophthalmological Diseases</p> <p>10. Neurologic Diseases</p> <p>11. Psychiatric Diseases</p> <p>12. ENT</p> <p>13. Diseases of the Musculoskeletal System</p> <p>Section B: SKILLS-BASED CHAPTERS </p> <p>14. General Surgery in the Tropics</p> <p>15. Oral Health and Disease in the Tropics</p> <p>16. Maternal and Newborn Health</p> <p>17. Pediatrics in a Resource-constrained Setting</p> <p>Section C: SERVICE-BASED CHAPTERS </p> <p>18. Diagnostic Imaging in the Tropics</p> <p>19. Blood Transfusion in Resource-limited Settings</p> <p>20. Infection Control in the Tropics</p> <p> 21. Microbiology</p> <p>Section D: TOPIC-BASED CHAPTERS </p> <p>22. Approach to the Patient with Diarrhea</p> <p>23. Cancer in the Tropics</p> <p> 24. Heat-associated Illness</p> <p> 25. Traditional Medicine</p> <p>26. Environmental Health Hazards in the Tropics</p> <p> 27. Neglected Tropical Diseases: Public Health Control Programs and Mass Drug Administration</p> <p>28. Health Systems and Health Care Delivery</p> <p>29. The Health Care Response to Disasters, Complex Emergencies, and Population Displacement </p> <p>Part 2: Viral Diseases </p> <p>Introduction and General Principles</p> <p>30. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection</p> <p>30.1 HIV, Tuberculosis, Malaria and Streptococcus pneumoniae</p> <p>31. Viral Infections with Cutaneous Lesions</p> <p> 31.1 Measles </p> <p>31.2 Poxviruses</p> <p> 31.3 Nonpolio Enterovirus Mucocutaneous Infections</p> <p> 31.4 Kaposi's Sarcoma-associated Herpesvirus</p> <p>32. Viral Respiratory Infections</p> <p> 33. Viral Gastroenteritis</p> <p>33.1 Rotavirus</p> <p>33.2 Norovirus</p> <p>33.3 Enteric Adenoviruses</p> <p> 33.4 Astroviruses</p> <p>33.5 Sapovirus</p> <p> 34. Viral Hepatitis (Hep A, B, C, D, E and Non A to E) </p> <p> 35. Viral Febrile Illnesses and Emerging Pathogens</p> <p>35.1 Dengue and Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever </p> <p> 35.2 Chikungunya Fever </p> <p>35.3 Zika </p> <p>35.4 O’nyong Nyong Fever</p> <p> 35.5 Ross River Virus Disease</p> <p> 35.6 Oropouche Virus</p> <p>35.7 Mayaro Virus</p> <p>35.8 Pathogenic Phleboviruses (old: Sandfly Fever) </p> <p>35.9 Sindbis Fever</p> <p> 36. Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers - INTRODUCTION </p> <p>36.1 Yellow Fever</p> <p> 36.2 Lassa Fever</p> <p>36.3 South American Hemorrhagic Fevers</p> <p>36.4 Ebola and Marburg Virus Infections</p> <p>36.5 Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever</p> <p> 36.6 Diseases Caused by Hantaviruses</p> <p> 36.7 Rift Valley Fever</p> <p> 37. Viral CNS Infections</p> <p>37.1 Rabies & Related Viruses</p> <p>37.2 Enterovirus Infections That Cause Central Nervous System Disease (including Poliomyelitis)</p> <p> 37.3 Venezuelan, Eastern and Western Equine Encephalitis</p> <p>37.4 Japanese Encephalitis</p> <p> 37.5 West Nile Virus</p> <p> 37.6 Saint Louis Encephalitis and Rocio Encephalitis</p> <p> 37.7 Other Arboviral Encephalitides</p> <p>37.8 Prion Disease</p> <p> 37.9 Human T-Lymphotropic Virus Type I and II Infection</p> <p>PART 3: BACTERIAL INFECTIONS</p> <p>Section A: Infections of the Eye and Throat </p> <p>38. Trachoma and Inclusion Conjunctivitis</p> <p>39. Group A Strepto coccus</p> <p>40. Diphtheria</p> <p>Section B: Respiratory Tract Infections </p> <p>41. Bacterial Pneumonia</p> <p>42. Tuberculosis</p> <p> 43. Pertussis</p> <p>Section C: Gastrointestinal Tract Infections </p> <p>44. Helicobacter pylori Infection</p> <p>45. Escherichia coli Diarrhea</p> <p>46. Cholera and Other Vibrios</p> <p>47. Shigellosis</p> <p>48. Nontyphoid Salmonella Disease</p> <p> 49. Campylobacter Infections</p> <p>50. Miscellaneous Bacterial Enteritides</p> <p>50.1 Yersinia Enterocolitica</p> <p>50.2 Clostridium Infections</p> <p>50.3 Aeromonas</p> <p>Section D: Sexually Transmitted Diseases </p> <p>51. Chlamydial Infections</p> <p> 52. Lymphogranuloma Venereum</p> <p>53. Gonorrhea</p> <p>54. Chancroid</p> <p> 55. Granuloma Inguinale</p> <p>56. Syphilis and the Endemic Treponematoses</p> <p>Section E: Infections Causing Neurologic Manisfestations </p> <p>57. Acute Bacterial Meningitis</p> <p>58. Tetanus</p> <p>59. Botulism</p> <p>Section F: Infections of Skin and Soft Tissues </p> <p>Bacterial skin and soft tissue infections in the Tropics</p> <p>60. Leprosy</p> <p>61. Buruli Ulcer</p> <p> 62. Mycobacterium marinum Infection</p> <p>63. Anthrax</p> <p>Section G: Febrile Systemic Syndromes with or without Lymphadenopathy </p> <p>64. Epidemic Louse-borne Typhus</p> <p>65. Murine Typhus</p> <p>66. Scrub Typhus</p> <p> 67. Tick-borne Spotted Fever Rickettsioses</p> <p>68. Rickettsialpox</p> <p>69. Q Fever</p> <p>70. Trench Fever</p> <p>71. Bartonellosis : Carrion's Disease and other Bartonella Infections</p> <p>72. Typhoid and Paratyphoid (Enteric) Fever</p> <p> 73. Brucellosis</p> <p>74. Melioidosis and Glanders</p> <p>75. Plague</p> <p>76. Tularemia</p> <p> 77. Leptospirosis</p> <p> 78. Relapsing Fever and Borrelioses</p> <p>Part 4 - The Mycoses</p> <p>79. General Principles</p> <p>80. Superficial Mycoses</p> <p>81. Subcutaneous Mycoses : General Principles</p> <p>82. Protothecosis</p> <p>83. Histoplasmosis</p> <p> 84. Coccidioidomycosis</p> <p>85. Blastomycosis</p> <p>86. Paracoccidioidomycosis</p> <p> 87. Cryptococcosis</p> <p>88. Penicilliosis Marneffei</p> <p> 89. Pneumocystis Pneumonia</p> <p>90. Treatment of Systemic Mycoses</p> <p>Part 5 - Protozoal Infections</p> <p>91. General Principles</p> <p>Section A: Intestinal and Genital Infections</p> <p>92. Entamoeba histolytica (Amebiasis)</p> <p>93. Giardiasis</p> <p>94. Cryptosporidiosis</p> <p>95. Cyclosporiasis</p> <p>96. Cystoisospora belli (syn. Isospora belli )</p> <p>97. Miscellaneous Intestinal Protozoa</p> <p>98. Trichomoniasis</p> <p> Section B: Infections of the Blood and Reticuloendothelial System </p> <p>99. Malaria</p> <p>100. African Trypanosomiasis</p> <p>101. American Trypanosomiasis (Chagas disease)</p> <p> 102. Leishmaniasis</p> <p>103. Babesiosis</p> <p>Section C: Tissue Infection </p> <p>104. Toxoplasmosis</p> <p>105. Pathogenic and Opportunistic Free-living Ameba Infections</p> <p>106. Sarcocystosis</p> <p>107. Microsporidiosis</p> <p>Part 6 - Helminthic Infections</p> <p>108. General Principles</p> <p>Section A: Intestinal Nematode Infections </p> <p>109. Nematodes Limited to the Intestinal Tract ( Enterobius vermicularis , Trichuris trichiura , Capillaria philippinensis and Trichostrongylus spp.)</p> <p>110. Intestinal Nematodes: Ascariasis</p> <p>111. Hookworm and Strongyloides Infections</p> <p>Section B: Filarial Infections </p> <p>112. Lymphatic Filariasis</p> <p>113. Loiasis</p> <p>114. Onchocerciasis</p> <p> 115. Miscellaneous Filariae</p> <p>Section C: Other Tissue Nematode Infections </p> <p>116. Dracunculiasis</p> <p>117. Trichinellosis</p> <p>118. Toxocariasis </p> <p> 119. Gnathostomiasis</p> <p>120. Eosinophilic Meningitis ( Angiostrongylus cantonensis , Parastrongylus cantonensis )</p> <p>121. Abdominal Angiostrongyliasis</p> <p> 122. Cutaneous Larva Migrans</p> <p> 123. Anisakidosis</p> <p>Section D: Trematodes Infections </p> <p>124. Schistosomiasis</p> <p>125. Intestinal Fluke Infections</p> <p>126. Liver Fluke Infections</p> <p> 127. Paragonimiasis</p> <p>Section E: Cestode Infections </p> <p>128. Tapeworm Infections</p> <p>129. Larval Cestode Infections (Cysticercosis)</p> <p>130. Cystic Echinococcosis</p> <p>131. Alveolar Echinococcosis (Alveolar Hydatid Disease)</p> <p>132. Polycystic Echinococcosis (Polycystic Neotropical Disease)</p> <p> 133. Sparganosis</p> <p>134. Coenuriasis</p> <p>Part 7 - Poisonous and Toxic Plants and Animals</p> <p>135. Animals hazardous to humans: Venomous Bites, Stings and Envenoming</p> <p> 136. Injurious Arthropods</p> <p>137. Poisonous Plants and Aquatic Animals</p> <p>138. PENTASTOMIASIS</p> <p>139. BATS</p> <p>Part 8 - Nutritional Problems and Deficiency Diseases</p> <p>140. General Principles</p> <p> 141. Protein-energy Malnutrition in Children</p> <p>142. Vitamin Deficiencies</p> <p>143. Mineral Deficiencies</p> <p>Part 9 - Vector Transmission of Diseases and Zoonoses</p> <p>Section A: Medical Entomology </p> <p>144. Introduction medical Entomology </p> <p>Section B: Diseases associated with Vectors (Arthropods in Disease Transmission) </p> <p>145. Diseases associated with Vectors (Arthropods in Disease Transmission) </p> <p>Section C: Vector Control </p> <p>146. Vector Control </p> <p>Part 10 - The sick returning traveller</p> <p>147. General Principles</p> <p> 148. Fever in the Returned Traveler</p> <p>149. Malaria in the Returned Traveler</p> <p>150. Screening of the Asymptomatic Long-term Traveler</p> <p> 151. Persistent Diarrhea in the Returned Traveler</p> <p> 152. Skin Lesions in Returning Travelers</p> <p>153. Eosinophilia in Migrants and Returned Travelers: A Practical Approach</p> <p>154. Immigrant Medicine</p> <p>155. International Adoption</p> <p>156. Medical Tourism</p> <p> 157. Transplant Patients and Tropical Diseases</p> <p>158. Delusional Parasitosis</p> <p>Part 11 - Laboratory Diagnosis of Parasitic </p> <p>159. General Principles</p> <p>159.1 Preparation of Samples for Morphologic Diagnosis of Parasites in Stool and Urine Specimens</p> <p>159.2 Examination of Blood, Other Body Fluids, Tissues, and Sputum</p> <p>Part 12: Drugs used in Tropical Medicine</p> <p>160. Albendazole</p> <p>161. Artemisinin</p> <p>162. Benznidazole </p> <p> 163. Dapsone</p> <p>164. DEC</p> <p>165. Eflornithine</p> <p> 166. Ivermectin</p> <p>167. Mebendazole</p> <p>168. Miltefosine</p> <p>169. Nifurtimox</p> <p>170. Nitazoxanide</p> <p> 171. Pentamidine </p> <p>172. Pentavalent Antimony</p> <p>173. Praziquantel</p>