Borovsky's disease

Borov's disease is an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Choleraesuis. This disease was discovered by Russian doctor Pyotr Fedorovich Borovsky in 1905.

Borovsky disease is characterized by high fever, vomiting and diarrhea. It can lead to dehydration and death if not treated promptly.

The main way to treat Borov's disease is to take antibiotics. In addition, the patient must be provided with plenty of fluids and nutrition to restore lost fluids and nutrients.

However, although hog disease is a serious illness, it is not as common as other infections. This is because the bacteria that causes hog disease usually lives only in the intestines of animals and cannot be transmitted from person to person.



Borovsky disease is a rare non-infectious disease that has its own characteristics and characteristic signs.

Borovskoy was a Russian scientist in the field of medicine, parasitology and bacteriology, a student of Academician I. I. Mechnikov. He was born in Moscow in 1857 and graduated from the medical faculty of Moscow University in 1791. Borovskoy became a member of the USSR Academy of Sciences. He studied the pathogenesis of tuberculosis, hemophilia, rheumatism, and developed methods for diagnosing smallpox and typhoid fever. Borovsky's works on the role of the tuberculosis bacillus in the development of pulmonary tuberculosis are classic. For the first time he described infective endocarditis, which develops soon after dental surgery, and studied its morphological substrate. Identified the causative agents of oncophlegmon and tumor diseases of the stomach (chronic lymphocytic leukemia, lymphogranulomatosis). Works on fevers. In 1908, he created the first scientific medical laboratory in Russia. For his scientific achievements, Borovskaya was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor in 1927.

In 1930, the scientist was elected Honorary Chairman of the Board of the Bureau for Combating Infectious Diseases of the Leningrad District Health Commissariat, and in 1946 he became Secretary General of the Central Committee of the Red Cross Society. In May 1963, he wrote a letter to the Institutional Affairs Commission. Borovsky died in August 1953 and was buried at the Bogoslovskoye cemetery.

One of the most common causes of death for the scientist was “Borovsky’s disease.”

The first report of the so-called myopathic muscle sclerosis, or Borowski's disease, was made in 1680 by O. Brandon