Results 281 to 290 of about 67,359 (330)
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Pathogenesis of bacteroides infections
Journal of Infection, 1979In 1898 Veillon and Zuber first recognised the pathogenic potential of anaerobic bacteria. During the next 70 years there had been sporadic investigations of the clinical importance of anaerobes, but it was not until the 1960's that major advances in laboratory techniques stimulated a spate of recent studies.
Francis P. Tally, Sherwood Gorbach
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Bacteroides infections in children
Journal of Medical Microbiology, 1995From 1974 to 1990, 336 Bacteroides isolates were obtained from 312 specimens from 274 patients. They comprised 180 (54%) B. fragilis isolates, 55 (16%) B. theta-iotaomicron, 36 (11%) B. vulgatus, 34 (10%) B. distasonis, 21 (6%) B. ovatus and 10 (3%) B. uniformis.
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Metronidazole treatment of Bacteroides fragilis infections
The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1980Seven patients with Bacteroides fragilis infections were treated with intravenous and/or oral metronidazole. Infections treated included endocarditis, osteomyelitis, lung abscess, empyema, peritonitis, septicemia, and pelvic infection. Some patients had failed to respond to therapy with chloramphenicol or clindamycin or both.
J C, Melo +5 more
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Metronidazole-resistant Bacteroides fragilis wound infection
Journal of Infection, 1992We report the isolation of metronidazole-resistant Bacteroides fragilis from a post-operative wound abscess in a 72-year-old woman who had not been treated with metronidazole during the preceding 9 months. The case illustrates the need for caution when identifying anaerobes on the basis of metronidazole sensitivity.
M A, O'Donoghue, J, Potter, K D, Allen
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La semaine des hopitaux : organe fonde par l'Association d'enseignement medical des hopitaux de Paris, 1976
The authors analyse 42 cases of bacteroides infection regrouping bacteremia and localised infection collected over a period of one year. The route of entry was almost always digestive. The prognosis seems mainly to depend on the background. The bacteriological diagnosis is now easy and germ-sensitivy is stereotyped.
J, Andrieu, M, Kwantes, A, Rey
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The authors analyse 42 cases of bacteroides infection regrouping bacteremia and localised infection collected over a period of one year. The route of entry was almost always digestive. The prognosis seems mainly to depend on the background. The bacteriological diagnosis is now easy and germ-sensitivy is stereotyped.
J, Andrieu, M, Kwantes, A, Rey
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POSTOPERATIVE BACTEROIDES INFECTION
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1937The recent article by Lemierre 1 and the subsequent editorial 2 inThe Journal of the American Medical Associationpointing out the scarcity of reports on postoperative Bacteroides septicemia has prompted us to report six cases of this type of infection.
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Infection with Clindamycin–Resistant Bacteroides uniformis
Chemotherapy, 1985We report a case of osteomyelitis due to a strain of Bacteroides uniformis highly resistant to clindamycin. The patient failed to respond to intravenous clindamycin therapy and eventually required amputation. This is the first documented occurrence of high-level clindamycin resistance in a clinical isolate of B. uniformis.
F A, Zar, E J, Bond
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Antibiotic resistance in the patient with cancer: Escalating challenges and paths forward
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021Amila K Nanayakkara +2 more
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