Results 291 to 300 of about 79,578 (329)
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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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Prepubertal Gonorrhea

Journal of Urology, 1979
Two cases of gonococcal urethritis in male children are presented and the records of 45 other children with gonorrhea are reviewed. The presentation, diagnosis and treatment are discussed. Data on the mode of transmission are presented with emphasis on the high incidence of gonorrhea in family members or close contacts of infected children, or a ...
J M, Meek, A, Askari, A B, Belman
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Asymptomatic Gonorrhea

Medical Clinics of North America, 1972
The results of our studies showed that: 1. Asymptomatic gonorrhea occurred in about 70% of infected women, and in 10 to 15% of infected men; 2. Asymptomatic rectal gonorrhea occurred in 15% of those women with positive cervical cultures, and in 20% of infected women was the sole site of a positive culture; 3.
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Gonorrhea: New challenges

Clinics in Dermatology, 2014
As "a paradigm of the classical Venereology" for many decades, gonorrhea appears to be the second most common sexually transmitted infection of bacterial origin today. In spite of its mostly uncomplicated clinical course, gonorrhea may sometimes result with serious complications such as pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, infertility ...
Skerlev, Mihael, Čulav-Košćak, Ivana
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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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Pharyngeal Gonorrhea

Pediatrics, 1983
To the Editor.— The article "Screening for Pharyngeal Gonorrhea in the Urban Teenager"1 is clearly of value to pediatricians. However, I believe the final conclusion of the paper, which advocates routine culture for pharyngeal gonorrhea "whenever genital cultures are collected," is premature.
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Pharyngeal Gonorrhea

Pediatrics, 1984
To the Editor.— The article, "Screening for Pharyngeal Gonorrhea in the Urban Teenager,"1 calls attention to the pharynx as an important site of infection and recommends routine culture of the pharynx in this population group. Among 80 adolescents with gonorrhea, 15 (19%) had pharyngeal infection.
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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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Gonorrhea: Update

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, Oral Radiology, and Endodontology, 2006
Gonorrhea is a worldwide sexually transmitted disease (STD) caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Gonorrhea is the second most often reported STD in the United States behind chlamydia. An estimated 600,000 people each year in the United States are infected. Only about half this number of cases are reported.
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