Results 241 to 250 of about 32,846 (294)
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Gonorrhea

Clinics in Laboratory Medicine, 1989
Laboratory methods for the isolation and identification of Neisseria gonorrhoeae are updated. The antimicrobial susceptibility patterns of the gonococcus are changing and becoming less predictable. Methods for monitoring susceptibility are presented. The use of serotyping, auxotyping, and molecular techniques to characterize gonococcal isolates and the
J M, Ehret, J S, Knapp
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Gonorrhea

Clinics in Dermatology, 2020
Neisseria gonorrhoeae, a Gram-negative intracellular pathogen, causes gonorrhea. While usually sexually transmissible, it can be acquired by direct inoculation. Untreated gonococcal infections have deleterious impacts, including adverse pregnancy outcomes, ectopic pregnancy, infertility, and even blindness.
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Gonorrhea

Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1983
The gonococcus has become an extremely important organism in obstetrics and gynecology. It is associated with a wide array of clinical syndromes that frequently confront the practitioner. The diagnostic modalities available are many and are rapidly increasing.
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Gonorrhea

Medical Clinics of North America, 1990
During a 10-year period from 1976 to 1985, N. gonorrhoeae demonstrated remarkable genetic resiliency in developing clinically important antimicrobial resistance through a variety of chromosomal mutations and by acquiring either entire plasmids or resistance determinants on plasmids from other species.
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Gonorrhea and the Pediatrician

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1973
A survey of San Diego pediatricians, 61% of whom responded to a mailed questionnaire, revealed that 20% had seen at least one child aged 16 years or less with symptomatic gonorrhea in 1971. This paper reviews the mode of infection, clinical picture, and age-specific therapy of gonorrhea in childhood.
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Gonorrhea in Women

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1971
Two hundred thirty-one female patients of private obstetricians and gynecologists were examined for gonorrhea, using cultural techniques. Specimens were taken from the cervix and rectum of all patients and cultured on Thayer-Martin (TM) selective medium. Six, or 2.6%, were found positive. Of these, all were in the 20- to 29-year age group; only one had
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Treatment of Gonorrhea

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1971
To the Editor.— An EDITORIAL inThe Journal( 216 :1472, 1971) voiced great concern about rising incidences of venereal disease in America. If one were to recall the situation in America in the early 1940s one would find great similarities between the situation then and the one we now face.
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Gonorrhea update

Current Infectious Disease Reports, 2004
This article provides a brief summary of recent US epide-miology, antimicrobial resistance, and treatment of Neisseria gonorrhoeae infections. Selected research regarding infections caused by N. gonorrhoeae is described, with particular emphasis on the advances made by new molecular methods.
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Gonorrhea

2003
Gonorrhea is a major sexually transmitted disease (STD) that occurs worldwide. The prevalence has fallen dramatically in most industrialized countries in the last ten years because of effective therapy, contact tracing, and changes in sexual practices since the advent of the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS).
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Treatment of Gonorrhea

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1969
To the Editor:— Maurer and Schneider ( 207 :946, 1969) report a failure rate of 25% in the treatment of gonorrhea with intramuscularly administered procaine penicillin G. The authors cite a study by Holmes ( JAMA 202:461, 1967) in which a high failure rate with this treatment regimen was also noted.
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