See Also: Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF)(health)
DHF (dengue hemorrhagic fever)(health)
Fever, dengue hemorrhagic (DHF)(health)
Dengue fever(medicine)
Dengue fever(health)
Fever, dengue(health)
Dengue haemorrhagic fever(medicine)
hemorrhagic fever(encyclopedia)
Fever, hemorrhagic(health)
Fever, Thai hemorrhagic(health)

Flinders River (sh) and Fever, dengue hemorrhagic (DHF) (health)


Flinders River (sh)




River, Queensland, Australia.

It rises on the southwestern slopes of the Gregory Range and flows west and then north to the Gulf of Carpentaria through two mouths, the second known as the Bynoe River, after a course of 520 mi (837 km). The river's valley was first settled in 1864; its lands are used in part for raising cattle and sheep. Only its lowest 70 mi (113 km) are usually perennial, with the rest of the river drying up during certain seasons of the year.


Fever, dengue hemorrhagic (DHF) (health)


A syndrome due to the dengue virus that tends to affect children under 10, causing abdominal pain, hemorrhage (bleeding) and circulatory collapse (shock). DHF starts abruptly with high continuous fever and headache plus respiratory and intestinal symptoms with sore throat, cough, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Shock occurs after 2 to 6 days with sudden collapse, cool clammy extremities, weak thready pulse, and blueness around the mouth (circumoral cyanosis). There is bleeding with easy bruising, blood spots in the skin (petechiae), spitting up blood (hematemesis), blood in the stool (melena), bleeding gums and nosebleeds (epistaxis). Pneumonia and heart inflammation (myocarditis) may be present. The mortality is appreciable ranging from 6 to 30%. Most deaths occur in children. Infants under a year of age are especially at risk of death. DHF is also called Philippine, Thai, or Southeast Asian hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome.