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A new virus that’s been dubbed tomato flu, or tomato fever ... in India since the first case was identified in the state of Kerala on May 6, according to a report in the Lancet Respiratory ...
This common disease may have been initially mistaken as a new “tomato flu” virus because the blisters observed in India were larger. Doctors in Kerala told BMJ that even in the cases they have ...
developed signs of the mystery “tomato flu” illness a week after returning from a family holiday in Kerala, India. Lab testing revealed the children did not have a mystery new virus ...
Doctors in India have sounded the alarm over a new virus dubbed 'tomato flu' that has infected dozens of children. The infection was spotted in May in the southern state of Kerala and it is feared ...
It's been called tomato virus because of the eruption of red and ... In May this year it was first identified in the Kollam district of Kerala, India. More than 82 children younger than five ...
The illness has been named after its most obvious feature - the nasty red blisters that appear on the skin and grow to the size of a tomato. It has been contained to the Kollam district of Kerala ...
Also called Tomato Fever, the first flu was reported in Kerala, India in May and has since ... Researchers said the virus is non-life-threatening and appears to be a variation of hand, foot ...