Results 171 to 180 of about 30,129 (205)
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Bacteriuria in Pregnancy

Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 1987
The urinary tract undergoes profound physiologic and anatomic changes during pregnancy that facilitate the development of symptomatic urinary tract infections in women with bacteriuria. While the adverse effects of asymptomatic bacteriuria on maternal and fetal health continue to be debated, it is clear that asymptomatic bacteriuria is the major risk ...
T F, Patterson, V T, Andriole
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BACTERIURIA IN PREGNANCY

BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 1973
SummaryBacteriuria (defined as the presence of organisms on culture in a specimen of urine obtained by suprapubic bladder aspiration) was found in 132 (6.6 per cent) out of 2000 pregnant women attending an antenatal clinic. Bacteriuria was more frequent in the lower than the upper social classes, but was not related to the patient's age, parity or ...
I R, McFadyen   +6 more
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[Bacteriuria].

Acta medica Austriaca, 1988
Bacteriuria remains the most important sign of urinary tract infection. A standardization of the diagnosis and treatment of urinary tract infection requires a standard period of urine collection (4 hours), the correct collection of specimens, the determination of the number of bacteria by appropriate media (dipslide) and of urinary leucocytes.
W, Graninger, E, Presterl
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Bacteriuria in Pregnancy

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1985
Summary: In a racially mixed community in Gisborne, New Zealand, the prevalence of asymptomatic (covert) bacteriuria of pregnancy was 9.6%. The prevalence in Maori women was 17.1% and in non‐Maori women 4.7%. There was a higher prevalence of bacteriuria in the younger women.
J, Reddy, A, Campbell
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Bacteriuria in appendicitis

The American Journal of Surgery, 1988
The value of bacteriologic findings in patients with acute appendicitis was studied. Routine urinary culture specimens were taken preoperatively from 194 children (mean age 11 +/- 3 years) undergoing emergency appendectomy. Bacteria were found in culture specimens of urine from 26 of 156 patients with acute appendicitis.
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Catheter-Associated Bacteriuria

Urologic Clinics of North America, 1986
Catheter-associated urinary tract infections are the most common nosocomial infection and a frequent cause of significant morbidity, sepsis, and death. The pathogenesis is multifaceted. Most frequently, bacteria from the urethral meatus ascend to the bladder between the mucosal and catheter surfaces.
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Catheter-associated Bacteriuria

Clinics in Geriatric Medicine, 1992
Catheter-associated bacteriuria is the most common nosocomial infection in both acute and long-term care facilities. Complications include fever, bacteremia, acute pyelonephritis, urinary stones, chronic renal inflammation, and death. Catheter-associated bacteriuria can be postponed by maintaining the closed nature of the catheter system.
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Bacteriuria revisited

Medicina Clínica (English Edition), 2022
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[Bacteriuria].

Der Internist, 1990
Richard J. Pels   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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