Page last updated: 2024-10-15

dinitrochlorobenzene and Infectious Mononucleosis

dinitrochlorobenzene has been researched along with Infectious Mononucleosis in 1 studies

Dinitrochlorobenzene: A skin irritant that may cause dermatitis of both primary and allergic types. Contact sensitization with DNCB has been used as a measure of cellular immunity. DNCB is also used as a reagent for the detection and determination of pyridine compounds.
1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene : A C-nitro compound that is chlorobenzene carrying a nitro substituent at each of the 2- and 4-positions.

Infectious Mononucleosis: A common, acute infection usually caused by the Epstein-Barr virus (HERPESVIRUS 4, HUMAN). There is an increase in mononuclear white blood cells and other atypical lymphocytes, generalized lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and occasionally hepatomegaly with hepatitis.

Research

Studies (1)

TimeframeStudies, this research(%)All Research%
pre-19901 (100.00)18.7374
1990's0 (0.00)18.2507
2000's0 (0.00)29.6817
2010's0 (0.00)24.3611
2020's0 (0.00)2.80

Authors

AuthorsStudies
Sheagren, JN1
Lunde, MN1
Simon, HB1

Other Studies

1 other study available for dinitrochlorobenzene and Infectious Mononucleosis

ArticleYear
Chronic lymphadenopathic toxoplasmosis. A case with marked hyperglobulinemia and impaired delayed hypersensitivity responses during active infection.
    The American journal of medicine, 1976, Volume: 60, Issue:2

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Chronic Disease; Diagnosis, Differential; Dinitrochlorobenzene; Hemagglutination

1976