Results 91 to 100 of about 1,103,646 (131)
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The Carrier State in Pertussis

Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1986
In order to determine whether healthy adults can be of importance for the spread of pertussis the nasopharyngeal flora of 391 healthy individuals working in close contact with children was investigated during the height of a pertussis epidemic. Only 1 carrier of Bordetella pertussis was found, even though all individuals were exposed to the organism ...
Birger Trollfors   +3 more
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Vesicles as antibiotic carrier: State of art

International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 2020
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has become a global health problem. Bacteria are able to adapt to different environments, with the presence or absence of a host, forming colonies and biofilms. In fact, biofilm formation confers chemical protection to the microbial cells, thus making most of the conventional antibiotics ineffective.
Marchianò, Verdiana   +4 more
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The Group A Streptococcal Carrier State [PDF]

open access: possibleAmerican Journal of Diseases of Children, 1988
Streptococcal infection usually is defined as a positive throat culture with a serologic response to group A beta-hemolytic streptococci, and a patient with a positive throat culture and no serologic response is a streptococcal carrier. Studies suggest that streptococcal carriers should show little clinical response to antibiotic therapy when compared ...
Martin F. Randolph   +2 more
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Group A Streptococcal Carrier State

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1988
Sir .—Gerber et al 1 raise important issues pertaining to identification of the group A streptococcal (GAS) carrier state. We agree that antistreptococcal antibody titers are of little value in distinguishing GAS carriers with intercurrent viral pharyngitis from patients with acute GAS infection.
Robert R. Tanz, Stanford T. Shulman
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THE CARRIER STATE IN VIRAL HEPATITIS

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1954
VIRAL HEPATITIS B Although considerable presumptive evidence concerning carriers of hepatitis virus B (serum hepatitis virus) can be seen in retrospect to have accumulated since 1920, when Stokes and others 1 suggested that an infectious agent was responsible for liver injury following parenteral injections of bismuth or arsenicals in the treatment of
Winslow J. Bashe   +12 more
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TRACHOMA

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1947
TRACHOMA is one of the most widely spread diseases in the world. It may be a definite threat to the American soldier as a result of continued exposure in the Asiatic countries. It is conservatively reported that in China the disease has an incidence of about 25 per cent, implicating about 100,000,000 people.
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Detection of the Carrier State for Classic Hemophilia

New England Journal of Medicine, 1973
Abstract Carriers of classic hemophilia may be detected by comparison of levels of antihemophilic factor as measured by clot-promoting assay (i.e., functionally active factor) and by quantitative immunoelectrophoresis (i.e., both functionally active and inactive factor). This technic has detected over 90 per cent of a group of known carriers.
Oscar D. Ratnoff, Bruce Bennett
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Duck Plague: A Carrier State in Waterfowl

Avian Diseases, 1979
Healthy waterfowl were found to be carriers of duck plague (DP) virus. Black ducks (Anas rubripes) and Canada geese (Branta canadensis) surviving a natural outbreak of DP at Coloma, Wisconsin, in 1973 yielded DP virus in cloacal swabs taken four years postinfection. Experimental infection of previously unexposed mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynochos) with
E C Burgess, T M Yuill, J Ossa
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Carrier states in a quantum dot

Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter, 1995
The ground-state and excited-state wavefunctions for interacting particles confined in a quantum dot are presented within the framework of the Johnson and Payne model. Properly symmetrized spin and spatial parts are laid out.
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Carrier State In Relation to Streptococcal Disease

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1964
The incidence of streptococcal illness is known to decrease markedly with adulthood (Schwentker et al11).Presumably one factor in this decrease is the development of active immunity during childhood. More than 35 types of group A hemolytic streptococci have been identified (Swift et al13), and the careful work of Quinn and Lowry9indicates that some of ...
Henry S. Harvey, Marjorie B. Dunlap
openaire   +3 more sources

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