Results 211 to 220 of about 294,266 (260)
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Biofilm formation

Dental Nursing, 2018
Peter Bacon discusses the problem of biofilm formation and the best management strategies to control its growth in dental unit waterlines
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Antibiotic-Induced Biofilm Formation

The International Journal of Artificial Organs, 2011
Surface-attached colonies of bacteria known as biofilms play a major role in the pathogenesis of device-related infections. Biofilm colonies are notorious for their resistance to suprainhibitory concentrations of antibiotics. Numerous studies have shown that subminimal inhibitory concentrations of some antibiotics can act as agonists of bacterial ...
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Biofilm formation by Streptococcus pneumoniae

Molecular Genetics, Microbiology and Virology, 2015
The biofilm process in Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) is described. Virtually all wild-type pneumococci are capable of the biofilm formation. The pneumococcal capsule may reduce the biofilm production, and the propensity to form biofilms has a reverse correlation with the amount of the capsule material.
A N, Mayanskiy   +3 more
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Bacterial biofilm formation and anti-biofilm strategies

Research in Microbiology
Bacteria are ubiquitous prokaryotes. They are involved in biofilm formation and also have the ability to produce anti-biofilm products for biofilm mitigation. This special issue entitled: "Biofilms- community structure, applications and mitigation" of the journal Research in Microbiology was designed to discuss the flexibility of bacterial biofilms and
Sesan Abiodun Aransiola   +2 more
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Finger Formation in Biofilm Layers

SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics, 2002
Summary: A simple single substrate limiting model of a growing biofilm layer is presented. One-dimensional moving front solutions are analyzed. Under certain conditions these solutions are shown to be linearly unstable to fingering instabilities. Scaling laws for the biofilm growth rate and length scale are derived. The nonlinear evolution of fingering
Dockery, J., Klapper, I.
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Biofilm Formation in Mycobacterial Genus; Mechanism of Biofilm Formation and Anti-mycobacterial Biofilm Agents

Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology
<i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i>, Mycobacterium leprae, and non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) are among the most significant human pathogens within the Mycobacterium genus. These pathogens can infect people who come into contact with biomaterials or have chronic illnesses.
Sina Nasrollahian   +5 more
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Observations of fouling biofilm formation

Canadian Journal of Microbiology, 1981
Fouling biofilm development was monitored in a completely mixed tubular recycle reactor. A unique sampling system allowed direct (brightfield, epifluorescence, and scanning electron photomicroscopy) and indirect (increased fluid frictional resistance) observations of biofilms. Low fluid velocity (138.5 cm/s) experiments had shorter induction times and
W F, McCoy   +3 more
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Nanometric Considerations in Biofilm Formation

Surgical Infections, 2019
Prosthetic contamination and biofilm formation continue to plague implanted materials. With increasing resistance to traditional antibiotic regimens, alternative approaches to preventing bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation have focused on the physiochemical properties of the prosthetics.
Joseph S, Fernandez-Moure   +4 more
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Cell Adhesion and Biofilm Formation Analysis

2022
Cell adhesion to surfaces and ulterior biofilm formation are critical processes in microbial development since living in biofilms is the preferred way of life within microorganisms. These processes are known to influence not only microorganisms development in the environment, but also their participation in biotechnological processes and have been the ...
Nercessian, Debora, Busalmen, Juan Pablo
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Promoting Biofilm Formation

Science Signaling, 2013
Bacteria use cyclic di-GMP as an allosteric activator of polysaccharide synthesis necessary for biofilm formation.
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