1907, George M. Gould, “Nosema”, in An illustrated dictionary of medicine, biology and allied sciences, 5th edition, Philadelphia: P. Blakiston's Son, →OCLC, page 876:
Nosema[…] Illness, disease.
“noso-, nos-, nosero-, noser-, -nosia, -nosis, -noses, -nosus, nosema-”, in Robertson's words for a modern age: a dictionary of English vocabulary words derived primarily from Latin and Greek sources, presented individually and in family units[1], Senior Scribe Publications, 2015, retrieved 2015-03-25
2007 February 22, Verlyn Klinkenborg, “Keeping Bees Among Us”, in New York Times[2]:
There were problems in my dad’s day: ants, skunks, wax moths and a couple of deadly but well-known bee diseases, like foulbrood and nosema.
2011, Kim Flottum, Better beekeeping: the ultimate guide to keeping stronger colonies and healthier, more productive bees, Beverly, MA: Quarry Books, →ISBN, page 139:
The trick to offsetting the effects of viruses, it seems, is to control nosema.
c.1st/2nd century CE, Valentin Rose, quoting anonymous translator of Pseudo-Soranus, Quaestiones medicinales, quoted in Anecdota graeca et graeco-latin : Zmitteilungen aus Handschriften zur Geschichte der griechischen Wissenschaft, Berlin: Duemmler, published 1963 (reprint of 1864 edition), →OCLC, page 258:
1586, Claudius Galen, edited by Giovanni Costeo, Galeni librorum septima classis […], Sexta hac nostra edition, Venetijs: Apud Iuntas, page 10 of section:
Noſon autem,an Noſema dicas,nihil intereſt:quemadmodum etiá non intereſt,Pathos,an Pathema dicas.Atqui pathus,id eſt paſſionis, appellationé de morbo dixiſſe ueteres,[…]
1890, “Nosema”, in John S. Billings et al., editors, The national medical dictionary : including English, French, German, Italian, and Latin technical terms used in medicine and the collateral sciences, and a series of tables of useful data, volume 2, Philadelphia: Lea Brothers, →OCLC, page 217: