Results 131 to 140 of about 1,130 (166)
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Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1983
Invasive fungal disease of humans caused by species of the genus Aspergillus Micheli ex Linnaeus has become a significant and prevalent problem in contemporary medicine, particularly with regard to the compromised host. This review addresses the current status of invasive aspergillosis, including microbiological, clinical, and pathologic aspects ...
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Invasive fungal disease of humans caused by species of the genus Aspergillus Micheli ex Linnaeus has become a significant and prevalent problem in contemporary medicine, particularly with regard to the compromised host. This review addresses the current status of invasive aspergillosis, including microbiological, clinical, and pathologic aspects ...
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TOO INVASIVE? LIFESTYLE PRACTICES OF INVASIVE VERSUS NON-INVASIVE CARDIOLOGISTS
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 2022Amir Khan +5 more
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Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 2006
Invasive candidiasis remains an important nosocomial infection that continues to present major diagnostic and therapeutic challenges to the clinician. Changes in the epidemiology of this disorder have occurred for many reasons, and included especially the extensive use of prophylactic antifungal agents, broad-spectrum antibacterial agents, and medical ...
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Invasive candidiasis remains an important nosocomial infection that continues to present major diagnostic and therapeutic challenges to the clinician. Changes in the epidemiology of this disorder have occurred for many reasons, and included especially the extensive use of prophylactic antifungal agents, broad-spectrum antibacterial agents, and medical ...
openaire +2 more sources
Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2019
In zebrafish, pioneer axons of the dorsal root ganglia require the release of synaptic-like vesicles to enter the spinal cord, suggesting that synaptic vesicles have a role in circuit formation ahead of synaptogenesis.
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In zebrafish, pioneer axons of the dorsal root ganglia require the release of synaptic-like vesicles to enter the spinal cord, suggesting that synaptic vesicles have a role in circuit formation ahead of synaptogenesis.
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GLOBAL PATTERNS OF PLANT INVASIONS AND THE CONCEPT OF INVASIBILITY
Ecology, 1999W M Lonsdale
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