Results 341 to 350 of about 2,800,713 (372)
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Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy, 2002
Bacterial pathogens are isolated from middle ear fluid in up to 90% of children with acute otitis media (OM). Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis predominate. Acute OM can be classified as uncomplicated, persistent, recurrent or chronic.
Michael E, Pichichero, Janet R, Casey
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Bacterial pathogens are isolated from middle ear fluid in up to 90% of children with acute otitis media (OM). Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis predominate. Acute OM can be classified as uncomplicated, persistent, recurrent or chronic.
Michael E, Pichichero, Janet R, Casey
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Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1990
Otitis media, one of the most common problems encountered in the care of children, remains fraught with controversy on the most appropriate methods of management. A proliferation of effective antimicrobial regimens has kept pace with emergence of resistant strains of pathogens, and sufficient information now exists to guide the clinician in making ...
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Otitis media, one of the most common problems encountered in the care of children, remains fraught with controversy on the most appropriate methods of management. A proliferation of effective antimicrobial regimens has kept pace with emergence of resistant strains of pathogens, and sufficient information now exists to guide the clinician in making ...
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Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1994
Otitis media is the most common respiratory tract infection of infancy and early childhood that is managed with antibacterial agents. A bacterial pathogen is isolated from the middle ear fluids of approximately two-thirds of children with acute otitis media; S. pneumoniae is the leading bacterial pathogen followed by nontypable strains of H. influenzae
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Otitis media is the most common respiratory tract infection of infancy and early childhood that is managed with antibacterial agents. A bacterial pathogen is isolated from the middle ear fluids of approximately two-thirds of children with acute otitis media; S. pneumoniae is the leading bacterial pathogen followed by nontypable strains of H. influenzae
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Nigerian Journal of Clinical Practice, 2016
INTRODUCTION Chronic otitis media (COM), affecting all over the world and in a wide range of age groups in Turkey, is an important cause of ear discharge and hearing loss.
S. Aksoy+6 more
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INTRODUCTION Chronic otitis media (COM), affecting all over the world and in a wide range of age groups in Turkey, is an important cause of ear discharge and hearing loss.
S. Aksoy+6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Pediatric Clinics of North America, 2013
Acute otitis media (AOM) is diagnosed based on visualization of a full or bulging tympanic membrane with middle ear effusion. The distribution of bacteria causing AOM in North America under the influence of pneumococcal conjugate vaccination and antibiotic selection pressure has resulted in a predominance of β-lactamase-producing Haemophilus influenzae
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Acute otitis media (AOM) is diagnosed based on visualization of a full or bulging tympanic membrane with middle ear effusion. The distribution of bacteria causing AOM in North America under the influence of pneumococcal conjugate vaccination and antibiotic selection pressure has resulted in a predominance of β-lactamase-producing Haemophilus influenzae
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Otitis Media and Otitis Externa
1998Otitis media and otitis externa are routinely and frequently diagnosed in office practice and are generally treated with few poor outcomes. They are usually easily diagnosed, and the organisms that cause them are well known. Yet, astonishingly, there remain several basic controversies in the treatment and care of individuals with these entities ...
Greg Clarity, Jo Ann Rosenfeld
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1983
SINCE the introduction of effective antibiotics, tuberculosis of the middle ear has become a rare entity in the United States and other western countries. Only 11 of 23,000 cases of suppurative otitis media reported from Great Britain during 1950 to 1959 were attributable to Mycobacterium tuberculosis .
Eugene C. Fletcher, Ming K. Jeang
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SINCE the introduction of effective antibiotics, tuberculosis of the middle ear has become a rare entity in the United States and other western countries. Only 11 of 23,000 cases of suppurative otitis media reported from Great Britain during 1950 to 1959 were attributable to Mycobacterium tuberculosis .
Eugene C. Fletcher, Ming K. Jeang
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Canadian Family Practice Guidelines, 2019
J. Cash, Kathleen Bradbury-Golas
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J. Cash, Kathleen Bradbury-Golas
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ORL, 2002
Acute otitis media (AOM) caused by <i>Streptococcus pneumoniae</i>, <i>Haemophilus influenzae</i> or <i>Moraxella catarrhalis</i> may induce specific systemic and/or local immune responses, which may protect from otitis media caused by the same bacteria.
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Acute otitis media (AOM) caused by <i>Streptococcus pneumoniae</i>, <i>Haemophilus influenzae</i> or <i>Moraxella catarrhalis</i> may induce specific systemic and/or local immune responses, which may protect from otitis media caused by the same bacteria.
openaire +3 more sources