Results 271 to 280 of about 139,802 (315)
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Mycobacterium marinum infections

Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases, 1999
Mycobacterium marinum is a saprophytic mycobacteria capable of causing soft tissue infection in humans, usually acquired by inoculation. As with other mycobacterial infections, diagnosis may be difficult and recent developments in molecular biology are also being applied to atypical mycobacteria such as Mycobacterium marinum.
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Urinary Mycobacterium fortuitum infection

Infection, 1990
Mycobacterium fortuitum, a common saprophyte usually found in water and soil, can also be isolated from sputum and gastric secretions of healthy carriers. Under certain conditions, significant clinical infections due to M. fortuitum do occur. Urinary tract infections are rarely caused by atypical mycobacteria.
B, Oren, R, Raz, H, Hass
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DISSEMINATED MYCOBACTERIUM XENOPI INFECTION

The Lancet, 1985
Une observation tres rare: Mycobacterium xenopi n'est pas considere comme pathogene, pour l'homme. 3 observations d'infection seulement ont ete publiees jusqu'ici, et 2 des malades etaient atteints de ...
J R, Weinberg   +4 more
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Mycobacterium avium Complex Infection

Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1988
NOTrE FROM DR. MERLE A. SANDE The issues addressed in this AIDS Commentary are complex ones. Are organisms that constitute the Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) significant pathogens in the patients infected with HIV? If they are, how should these infections in this population of patients be treated? Dr. Lowell S.
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Latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection

New England Journal of Medicine, 2015
The natural history of tuberculosis begins with the inhalation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis organisms; a period of bacterial replication and dissemination ensues, followed by immunologic containment of viable bacilli. The result of this process is asymptomatic latent tuberculosis infection, which is defined as a state of persistent bacterial viability,
Getahun, Haileyesus   +3 more
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Mycobacterium marinum Infections

Southern Medical Journal, 1982
ABSTRACTMycobacterium marinum is capable of producing prolonged and disabling infections largely because early clinical and laboratory diagnosis is difficult and familiarity with the disease is limited.
E, Prevost   +3 more
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Mycobacterium marinum Infections

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1987
Disease due to Mycobacterium marinum has been well characterized as to epidemiology, pathogenesis, potential clinical courses, diagnostic methods, and effective forms of therapy. 1-8 The article by Donta et al 9 in a previous issue of the Archives raised several points that need be addressed.
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Pulmonary Mycobacterium szulgai infection.

Irish medical journal, 2012
There has been an increase in the number of pulmonary infections caused by non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) in the non HIV-infected population with a heightened awareness clinically and in the laboratory of the significance of these respiratory isolates and newer identification techniques.
McSweeney, FGB   +4 more
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Mycobacterium marinum Infection

Archives of Dermatology, 1974
To the Editor.— We recently saw a 41-year-old man with a sporotrichoid Mycobacterium marinum (balnei) infection of the right hand and arm. The initial inoculation occurred on the right third dorsal finger and was temporally related to an abrasion sustained when the patient was cleansing his aquarium.
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Mycobacterium kansasii Infection

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1991
Excerpt To the Editors:I read with great interest Levine and Chaisson's report (1) onMycobacterium kansasiiinfection in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection.
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