Results 211 to 220 of about 78,676 (263)
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Nigerian Journal of Clinical Practice, 2019
Aim: Serratia marcescens clinical isolates are increasingly resistant to antibiotics. Therefore, the treatment of infections caused by S. marcescens becomes difficult.
M. Şimşek
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Aim: Serratia marcescens clinical isolates are increasingly resistant to antibiotics. Therefore, the treatment of infections caused by S. marcescens becomes difficult.
M. Şimşek
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CELLULAR POLYSACCHARIDES OF SERRATIA MARCESCENS
Canadian Journal of Biochemistry, 1967Decapsulated cells of Serratia marcescens were fractionated to yield crude cytoplasmic (I) lipopolysaccharide (II) and cell-wall (III) polysaccharides. Further separation of I yielded dialyzable polysaccharides composed of D-glucose and D-mannose and nondialyzable polysaccharides containing various proportions of D-glucose, D-mannose, L-rhamnose ...
Adams, G.A., Martin, S.M.
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EXTRACELLULAR POLYSACCHARIDES OF SERRATIA MARCESCENS
Canadian Journal of Biochemistry, 1964Growth of Serratia marcescens on sucrose, D-glucose, D-galactose, and D-xylose as carbon sources did not affect the composition of the extracellular polysaccharides significantly. D-Glucose was the major component with lesser amounts of D-mannose, heptose, L-fucose, and L-rhamnose.
Adams, G.A., Martin, S.M.
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CAPSULAR POLYSACCHARIDES OF SERRATIA MARCESCENS
Canadian Journal of Biochemistry, 1965Four polysaccharides were isolated from the capsular layer of Serratia marcescens cells grown on a sucrose medium. In composition, electrophoretic behavior, and sedimentation in the ultracentrifuge, all were shown to be markedly different. Analytical data indicated that the polysaccharides were an acidic glucomannan (I), a rhamnoglucan (II), a ...
Adams, G.A., Young, Robert
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Serratia marcescens Endocarditis
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1973Excerpt To the editor: Farhoudi, Banks, and Ali reported (Ann Intern Med78:776-777, 1973) a case ofSerratia marcescensendocarditis that was successfully treated with gentamicin and carbenicillin.
FAROQUE A. KHAN, ARFA R. KHAN
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Infection Control, 1986
The recognition of serratia as an opportunistic human pathogen can be dated from 1959, when the microorganism entered the family ofEnterobacteriaceae,with features recognizable in the clinical laboratory and related to theKlebsiella/Enterobactergroup.
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The recognition of serratia as an opportunistic human pathogen can be dated from 1959, when the microorganism entered the family ofEnterobacteriaceae,with features recognizable in the clinical laboratory and related to theKlebsiella/Enterobactergroup.
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Adsorption behavior and mechanism of Serratia marcescens for Eu(III) in rare earth wastewater
Environmental science and pollution research international, 2021Jili Shen +7 more
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Serratia Marcescens Keratoconjunctivitis
American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1970W E, Atlee, R P, Burns, M, Oden
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Serratia marcescens osteomyelitis
RöFo - Fortschritte auf dem Gebiet der Röntgenstrahlen und der bildgebenden Verfahren, 1981F A, Burgener, D J, Hamlin
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Serratia Marcescens Endophthalmitis
American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1971J F, Bigger +3 more
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