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Pneumocystis Carinii : An Update
Ultrastructural Pathology, 2003Pneumocystis produces respiratory infection in immunocompromised individuals of several species of mammals, including humans. Each mammalian species has its own specific Pneumocystis species, which does not cross-infect other mammals. The species infecting humans has now been renamed P. jerovici, since P.
Gurdip S, Sidhu +2 more
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Pneumocystis carinii Infection
Southern Medical Journal, 1977Over the past decade, P carinii has become an important cause of pneumonia in the compromised host. Progress has been made in clinical awareness of the organism, in methods of diagnosis, and in developing new forms of treatment. However, there is still a lack of basic knowledge about the biology, taxonomy, and epidemiology of P carinii; of specific ...
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Pneumocystis Carinii Pneumonia
1986Prior to 1981, Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) was a rather rare disease seen primarily by physicians working with oncology or transplant patients. Then early in June 1981, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) issued the first report of PCP in five homosexual men in Los Angeles1. That brief report, in retrospect, marked the beginning of a new and
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Pneumocystis Carinii Pneumonia
Radiology, 1960Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is apparently still rare in the United States, since only seven deaths from this cause have been unequivocally proved. The seventh of these cases, from the John Sealy Hospital, Galveston, Texas, brought to our attention this interesting and serious interstitial plasma-cell pneumonia which we had not heretofore recognized.
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Pneumocystis carinii in wildlife
International Journal for Parasitology, 1998Pneumocystis carinii is a eukaryotic organism capable of causing life-threatening pneumonia (PCP) in immunocompromised hosts. Despite intensive investigation in human and laboratory animal hosts, information on the occurrence and nature of infections in wild animals is scarce, although characterisation of infections in wild-animal populations may help ...
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Pneumocystis carinii Pneumonitis
Infectious Diseases in Clinical Practice, 1984I n a sense, opportunistic infections may serve as diagnostic indicators of certain host defects or disease processes that diminish the immune response. The myriad microbes comprising the endogenous and exogenous flora of man are rarely a threat to the health of normal individuals.
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Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1971J S, Remington, L O, Gentry
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