Syllabus of lectures, 2h/weekly: 1. Epizootic and epidemiological importance of zoonoses, evolution of zoonoses, an animal and a human as source agents; 2. Zoonoses, characteristics and distribution, Surveillance of zoonoses; 3. Environmental factors, climatic and social factors influencing the emergence of zoonoses; 4. Vectors and their epizootiological and epidemiological significance; 5. Geography and epizootiological and epidemiological situation in the incidence of zoonoses; 6. Bioterrorism, zoonoses as biological warfare agents; 7. Specific prevention - vaccination of animals and humans; 8. Prevention and control of zoonoses; 9. Emerging and re-emerging diseases; 10. Vector borne protozoonoses; 11. Vector borne helminthoses; 12. Water and food borne parasitic zoonoses; 13. Ectoparasitoses; strategy in the prevention of parasitic zoonoses. Syllabus of lessons 2h/weekly: 1. Bacterial and viral encephalitis and encephalomyelitis; diagnosis, prevention and control. 2. Zoonoses with the natural focal character; diagnosis, prevention and control. 3. Haemorrhagic fever; diagnosis, prevention and control. 4. Influenza and other respiratory zoonoses; diagnosis, prevention and control. 5. Mycobacterioses; diagnosis, prevention and control. 6. Anaerobic zoonoses; diagnosis, prevention and control. 7. Anthrax and brucellosis; diagnosis, prevention and control. 8. Diagnosis, prevention and control of giardiosis, cryptosporidiosis, amoebosis. 9. Diagnosis, prevention and control of tissue protozooses. 10. Vector-borne helminthoses - diagnosis and prevention. 11. Food-borne trematodoses, diagnosis and prevention. 12. Cestodoses-taeniidoses, cysticercosis, coenurosis, hydatidosis, alveococosis. 13. Diagnosis and prevention of ectoparasitoses. |