C. lusitaniae was first identified as a human pathogen in 1979.
Emerging infections account for at least 12% of all human pathogens.
"Nothing convinces me it is not acting as a human pathogen."
Such studies have been carried out on several human pathogens.
Malaria may have been a human pathogen for the entire history of the species.
For example, some diseases have been linked to human pathogens.
M. branderi has to be considered a potential human pathogen.
Its significance as human pathogen was not discovered before the 1950s.
The human pathogens of Lamarckia were cultural and philosophical, not biological.
It can be a human pathogen but occurrences are very rare.