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Bacterial Metastasis Following B.C.G.‐Vaccination
Acta Paediatrica, 1966SummaryAn abscess in the left metatarsale I in a boy, aged 10 months, and a subcutaneous abscess at the right wrist in a girl 2 years old were found to contain bacilli with all the characteristics of the Swedish B.C.G.‐ strain. The histological picture was that of tuberculosis. Both children were B.C.G.‐ vaccinated in the neonatal period.
A, Wallerström, H, Enell
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Vaccination against bacterial gut infections
Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases, 1998Recent developments in the field of vaccination against gut-borne bacterial illness are reviewed, including the major pathogens such as salmonella, shigella, cholera and Escherichia coli. The approaches covered range from immunization with killed and live attenuated organisms to genetically detoxified toxin molecules and DNA vaccination and transgenic ...
M, Fielder, D J, Lewis
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Bacterial Vaccines for Splenectomized Patients
Drug Intelligence & Clinical Pharmacy, 1988The spleen is an important organ in the defense of the body against pathogenic bacteria. Major functions of the spleen include antibody production and mechanical filtration of blood. Anatomically or functionally asplenic individuals are at increased risk of fulminant infection by encapsulated bacteria, particularly Streptococcus pneumoniae, Hemophilus ...
K T, Kafidi, J C, Rotschafer
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Zeitschrift fur die gesamte Hygiene und ihre Grenzgebiete, 1982
A well founded vaccination strategy is of crucial importance for controlling communicable diseases. The WHO Enlarged Vaccination Programme of 1976 provides to protect by vaccination all children in the world against six infection diseases - diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, measles, poliomyelitis, and tuberculosis, a sure immunization prophylaxis being ...
S, Mebel, W, Thilo
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A well founded vaccination strategy is of crucial importance for controlling communicable diseases. The WHO Enlarged Vaccination Programme of 1976 provides to protect by vaccination all children in the world against six infection diseases - diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, measles, poliomyelitis, and tuberculosis, a sure immunization prophylaxis being ...
S, Mebel, W, Thilo
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"SENSITIZED BACTERIAL VACCINES"
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1926To the Editor: —In answer to a query regarding sensitized bacterial vaccines (The Journal, April 24), a statement was made that "sensitized bacterial vaccines are objectionable because they may sensitize the injected person to the proteins in the animal serum with which the bacteria have been treated." Apparently it is assumed that sufficient animal ...
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Vaccines against intracellular bacterial pathogens
Drug Discovery Today, 2008There is a long history of remarkable success in developing vaccines against bacteria that are extracellular pathogens. In general, the development of vaccines against intracellular bacterial pathogens has proven to be more challenging. Typically, such vaccines need to induce a range of immune responses, including antibody, CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell ...
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Bacterial Polysaccharide Vaccines
2011Capsulated bacteria, Gram-positive or Gram-negative, cause a variety of infections in man. Prominent among them are streptococci of Lancefield’s groups A, B, and C, staphylococci, meningococci, Haemophilus influenzae type b, klebsiellas, Escherichia coli, and Salmonella typhi, to name but some.
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