Results 121 to 130 of about 610,554 (170)
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Early antibiotic treatment failure

International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents, 2009
There is no consensus on the definition of treatment failure. It is usually based on clinical signs, although microbiological and other biological markers may prove of value in the future. The major risk factors associated with treatment failure include an inadequate antimicrobial spectrum of the prescribed antibiotic and lack of, or insufficient ...
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Atrophic rhinitis: Antibiotic treatment

American Journal of Otolaryngology, 1987
Atrophic rhinitis is a term used to describe a rare nasal infection. Although it does not have a fatal outcome, cause osteomyelitis, or produce pain, it does induce bilateral nasal obstruction and a persistent foul odor of which the subject and others are painfully aware.
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ANTIBIOTIC TREATMENT OF PERTUSSIS

Pediatrics, 1969
The whoop is heard in the land ever less frequently with the passing decades since pertussis immunization has become widespread. Pediatricians sequestered in suburbia may have relegated it to the status of a medical curiosity; but, pertussis remains an important cause of infant morbidity.
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Antibiotic Treatment of Asymptomatic Bacteriuria

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1973
Asymptomatic bacteriuria was detected in 27 (1.14%) of 1,389 girls utilizing an automatic urine collection seat with results confirmed by two additional clean-voided urine collections or by suprapubic bladder aspiration. Neither a microculture technique nor overnight refrigeration of specimens was found satisfactory for this program.
J I, Scheinman   +3 more
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Antibiotic treatment of bacterial gastroenteritis

The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 1991
Antibiotic treatment is important in certain etiologies of bacterial gastroenteritis, both for clinical improvement and for eradication of the causative organism from stools, which is important epidemiologically. The etiology, however, is seldom known at presentation in sporadic cases of diarrhea.
S, Ashkenazi, T G, Cleary
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Chronic ulcers and antibiotic treatment

Journal of Wound Care, 1998
This study analysed 656 wound samples from patients with chronic wounds in order to determine the bacterial flora and patterns of antibiotic use and resistance. Almost all wounds (95.1%) were colonised with at least one bacterial species; 26% of all patients were on antibiotic treatment.
A, Tammelin, C, Lindholm, A, Hambraeus
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Combined Antibiotic Treatment

Microbe Magazine, 2006
The May 2006 issue of Microbe contained a letter from John S. Hibbard in which he presented a cogent case stating that “….all infectious diseases should be treated with a combination of two antibiotics with different mechanisms of action…” His premise is a good one, but is 46 years too late. It's been done! I refer him to: (i) W. E. Herrell, A. Balows,
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Intratracheal antibiotic treatment

Veterinary Record, 1989
J M, Evans, P, Smitherman
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Antibiotics for treatment of leptospirosis

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
Leptospirosis is a disease transmitted from animals to humans through water, soil, or food contaminated with the urine of infected animals, caused by pathogenic Leptospira species. Antibiotics are commonly prescribed for the management of leptospirosis. Despite the widespread use of antibiotic treatment for leptospirosis, there seems to be insufficient
Tin Zar, Win   +6 more
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Antibiotic resistance in the patient with cancer: Escalating challenges and paths forward

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021
Amila K Nanayakkara   +2 more
exaly  

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