genital herpes
It can outbreak all over the body and happen again
An epidemic is defined as spreading rapidly and extensively by infection and affecting many individuals in an area or a population at the same time.
Progress of the SARS outbreak happened in 2004.
sudden increase in the cases is epidemic and sudden increasein the cases is outbreak but epidemic word is used in medical terminology and outbreak word is for a layman person
The Super Outbreak of 1974, which produce 148 confirmed tornadoes, lasted 15 hours.
The name of that disease is Herpes zoster.
The Ebola virus was started by contaminated water.
Southerners feared he would abolish slavery and seceded.
Herpes is a sexually transmitted disease (STD) caused by the herpes simplex viruses type 1 (HSV-1) or type 2 (HSV-2). Most genital herpes is caused by HSV-2. Most individuals have no or only minimal signs or symptoms from HSV-1 or HSV-2 infection. When signs do occur, they typically appear as one or more blisters on or around the genitals or rectum. The blisters break, leaving tender ulcers (sores) that may take two to four weeks to heal the first time they occur. Typically, another outbreak can appear weeks or months after the first, but it almost always is less severe and shorter than the first outbreak. Although the infection can stay in the body indefinitely, the number of outbreaks tends to decrease over a period of years. ...THANKS TO http://www.cdc.gov/std/herpes/STDFact-herpes.htm#Whatis
It can outbreak all over the body and happen again
Herpes lesions like cold sores are spread to others by skin-to-skin contact with the affected area. The infection is contagious during and just before an outbreak.
appeasement
Herpes is spread by coming in contact with the herpes virus. The herpes virus can be spread even when a person isn't having an outbreak.
Cold sores appear as a cluster of small blisters usually on the lips or around the mouth, especially the corners, and occasionally inside the nose. Approximately 20-40% of people will suffer a recurrent outbreak
The motaba virus, which is an "Ebola-like" fictional hemorrhagic virus from the film Outbreak, was initially transmitted through some kind of fluid exchange, and later became airborne.
It is possible that the fleas have transmitted the bubonic plague to humans. The plague is easily transmitted from infected rats to humans through fleas.
The General-in-Chief at the outbreak of war was Winfield Scott, followed by George McLellan, [short interval, then] Henry Halleck, and finally Ulysses Grant.