Results 251 to 260 of about 335,194 (304)
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Bacterial Pneumonia

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 1991
Bacterial pneumonia in the horse often occurs secondary to viral respiratory infection; however, primary infections can occur. A diagnosis of bacterial pneumonia is made on the basis of history, physical examination, and laboratory and radiographic findings.
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Bacterial Pneumonia

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 1997
Bacteria play a critical role in the severe pneumonia and fatalities associated with the bovine respiratory disease complex. Although numerous bacteria have the potential to cause pneumonia, only a small number of these are responsible for the majority of cases of disease.
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Bacterial Pneumonia

2023
Abstract Summary Bacterial pneumonia is lung parenchymal inflammation due to infection by a bacterial pathogen and it manifests with infective symptoms including cough productive of purulent sputum, dyspnoea, hypoxia, and pyrexia.
David R Woods, Ricardo J José
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Acute Bacterial Pneumonia

Postgraduate Medicine, 1952
The case of a 45 year old man with type II pneumococcal pneumonia and bacteremia is briefly presented, and the pathogenesis, mechanism of recovery, and treatment of acute bacterial pneumonia are discussed.
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Non-Bacterial Pneumonias

Diseases of the Chest, 1950
In recent years, evidence has accumulated of the successful application of present knowledge and of new developments in the field of diagnostic bacteriology and virology by the disentanglement with fair regularity of successive new entities from the ”scrap pile” commonly referred to as ”virus pneumonia,” ”interstitial pneumonia,” ”atypical pneumonia ...
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Bacterial Pneumonia in the Elderly

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1990
Bacterial pneumonia is among the most frequent diagnoses that bring elderly patients to the Emergency Department. The morbidity and mortality subsequent to these infections is very high among these individuals, and presenting symptoms and signs may be subtle. Gram-negative bacilli, H.
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Bacterial and Fungal Pneumonias

Clinics in Chest Medicine, 1988
Bacterial pneumonias occur with increased frequency and can be associated with increased morbidity in the HIV-infected population compared with normals. The pathogens that most frequently cause community-acquired pneumonias are S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, and occasionally S. aureus.
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TREATMENT OF BACTERIAL PNEUMONIA

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1955
MOST FORMS of bacterial pneumonia can be treated successfully at the present time. As a result, the mortality rate has declined from over 30% to less than 10% during the past two decades. However, deaths still occur frequently among small infants, in elderly persons, and in patients in whom treatment is not instituted early.
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Bacterial pneumonia

Postgraduate Medicine, 1993
Bacterial pneumonia isn't what it used to be. The most common causes, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae, are developing strains that are resistant to powerful antibiotics: How do you choose a therapeutic agent? New organisms are being discovered to be culprits in this disease: How do you keep track of them?
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Bacterial Pneumonia

Medicine, 2008
Nestor L. Müller, C. Isabela S. Silva
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