
This is a graphic that shows the distribution of African trypanosomiasis disease worldwide in the year 2008. It shows the number of reported cases in the areas most affected in Africa.


This chart shows the distribution of human African trypanosomiasis worldwide in the year 2008. The number of reported cases in each country are listed in the bottom right. The vast majority took place in central and south Africa.


It is a map titled "Distribution of Human African tryparpanosomiasis world wide in 2008" which tells you how many reported cases of the disease that there were in 2008.


The figure describes the distribution of human African trypanosomiasis by countries. The most of the distribution is located in the African countries and represented by colors by regions. Dark blue represents over 1000 reported cases which are concentrated in the Congo and Central Africal Republic.


This is a graph of the distribution of human African Trypanosomia throughout the world. The greatest concentration is in Central and Southern Africa, while almost no cases reported in other continents.


The image on the left hand side is a world view of each country/continent showing the distribution of human African trypanosomiases cases from a collection of data in 2008. From the graph, one can infer that the highest proportion of these cases come from eastern and southern Africa.


His is a map of Africa that shows how widely a certain disease is spread. It's separared by country so that we can see how each country compares on the whole continent of Africa.


This chart measures the worldwide distribution of human African trypanosomia in 2008. The number of reported case are measured with a low of o cases to greater than 1,000 reported cases. There are 2 other measurements: endemic countries, and non-endemic countries.


This is a color coded global map depicting the distribution of human African trypansosomia throughout the world in the year 2008. The highest concentrations are shown to be in Africa.


The image depicts the distribution of human Africa trypanosomiasis (gambiense, worldwide, in 2008). The statistics show more than 1000 cases reported in many individual African countries, spanning northern to central Africa, with fewer cases reported in West Africa.


The graph shows where there were cases of humans infected with African trypanosomiasis in 2008. It seems that all fo the cases where in Africa, with the central countries being the most affected.


Map diagram showing the distribution of human African trypanosomiasis (T.b gambiense), worldwide based on the number of reported cases in 2008. Africa is the only country in the world where cases of trypanosomiasis have been reported with the largest number of reported cases occurring in Central Africa.

