All submissions of the EM system will be redirected to Online Manuscript Submission System. Authors are requested to submit articles directly to Online Manuscript Submission System of respective journal.

Parasitic Diseases Scholarly Journal

A parasitic disease, also referred to as parasitosis, is an communicable disease caused or transmitted by a parasite. Many parasites don't cause diseases because it may eventually cause death of both organism and host. Parasites infecting human beings are called human parasites. Parasitic infections are often spread during a number of the way . Some parasites are spread by insects that act as a vector, or carrier, of the disease. For example, malaria is caused by parasitic protozoa that are transmitted by mosquitos once they prey on humans. Some people think of parasitic infections, like malaria, as occurring only in developing countries or in tropical areas, but parasitic infections exist in North America as well. The most common ones found in North America include Giardia infections (through contaminated water) and toxoplasmosis (spread by cats). Viruses are usually bad for those they infect. But not for one parasite, which gets a competitive boost from carrying an epidemic, new research is showing. The virus, called Leishmania RNA virus-1 (or LRV-1), infects parasitic protozoa, or single-celled organisms, of the Leishmania, which causes skin sores. Here are the most common symptoms: Unexplained constipation, diarrhea, gas, bloating, nausea or other symptoms of Irritable Bowel Syndrome. You traveled internationally and got diarrhea on your trip. Scholarly journal may be a peer-reviewed journal during which scholarship concerning a specific academic discipline is published. Content typically takes the shape of articles presenting original research, review articles, and book reviews. The term Scholarly journal applies to scholarly publications altogether fields; this text discusses the aspects common to all or any academic field journals