Q fever vaccine


A vaccine against Q fever, an illness first recognized in Australia in the 1930’s that affects people dealing with infected sheep and cattle and their hides and carcasses.

The microscopic bacterial agent of Q fever, Coxiella burnetii, is spread with airborne dust and contaminated milk. It was named Q, for query, because little was clear about the condition except that it caused bad fevers, headaches, sweating, dry coughs and chest and muscle pain, normally lasting up to two weeks. The first outbreaks of Q fever in Europe affected troops from both sides in World War II, prompting a concentrated effort to search for a remedy.

An American Dr. Paul Fiset collaborated with Dr. Michael George Stoker at Cambridge University in England from 1953 to 1956 to decode the structure of Coxiella burnetii. Dr. Fiset’s later studies (at the Universities of Rochester and Maryland) were instrumental in the creation of a vaccine for Q fever.

Read Also:

  • q in population genetics

    The frequency of the less common of two different alternative (allelic) versions of a gene. (The frequency of the more common allele is p).

  • q.2h

    On a prescription, every two hours.

  • q.3h.

    On a prescription, every three hours.

  • q.d. (on prescription)

    If a medicine is to be taken every so-many hours, it is written “q_h”; the “q” standing for “quaque” and the “h” indicating the number of hours. So, for example, “2 caps q4h” means “Take 2 capsules every 4 hours.”

  • q.h. (on prescription)

    If a medicine is to be taken every so-many hours, it is written “q_h”; the “q” standing for “quaque” and the “h” indicating the number of hours. So, for example, “2 caps q4h” means “Take 2 capsules every 4 hours.”


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