Results 211 to 220 of about 25,893 (252)
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A COMPARISON OF ACUTE RHEUMATIC AND SUBACUTE BACTERIAL ENDOCARDITIS
A typical case of subacute bacterial endocarditis is characterized clinically by a septic temperature, physical signs of valvular heart disease, evidence of embolic processes (petechiae, embolic glomerulonephritis, etc.), and a positive blood culture ...
B. Clawson, E. T. Bell
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, 1923
It is the purpose of this paper to present two cases of malignant endocarditis associated with Streptococcus uiridans septicemia, showing some unusual cells termed macrophages in the peripheral blood.
J. Sampson, W. Kerr, M. E. Simpson
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It is the purpose of this paper to present two cases of malignant endocarditis associated with Streptococcus uiridans septicemia, showing some unusual cells termed macrophages in the peripheral blood.
J. Sampson, W. Kerr, M. E. Simpson
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SALMONELLA SUBACUTE BACTERIAL ENDOCARDITIS
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1956Excerpt Organisms of the Salmonella group rarely produce bacterial endocarditis.1Perusal of the literature from 1929 reveals 24 published cases, only two of which did not terminate fatally.
Maurice Rich, Edward St. Mary
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Subacute bacterial endocarditis
American Heart Journal, 1937Abstract In this series subacute bacterial endocarditis was more common among males than among females. In the majority of cases the patients were in the third, fourth, and fifth decades of life. Embolic processes were common. The spleen was almost invariably enlarged, even though not palpable.
J.Russell Brink, Harry L. Smith
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, 1924
The condition of the heart valves included in the term subacute bacterial endocarditis has within the last fifteen to twenty years created much interest. As early as 1885, Osler 1 described this condition in what he called malignant endocarditis.
B. Clawson
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The condition of the heart valves included in the term subacute bacterial endocarditis has within the last fifteen to twenty years created much interest. As early as 1885, Osler 1 described this condition in what he called malignant endocarditis.
B. Clawson
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SUBACUTE BACTERIAL ENDOCARDITIS
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1933Excerpt The fact that I have seen in the Charity Hospital in New Orleans in the past two years many more cases of subacute bacterial endocarditis than I remember ever having seen in the past, has l...
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Pregnancy and subacute bacterial endocarditis
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1948Abstract There have been 10 cases with a diagnosis of subacute bacterial endocarditis complicating pregnancy in some 50,000 patients at the New York Lying-In Hospital from 1932 through 1947. The incidence of this complication is 0.02 per cent. Three cases with positive blood cultures occurred before the use of penicillin and all died during pregnancy
Curtis L. Mendelson, Curtis L. Mendelson
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Subacute bacterial endocarditis due to Flavobacterium meningosepticum.
American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1972The first case of subacute bacterial endocarditis due to Flavobacterium meningosepticum , type F, is reported. The organism was isolated from a 30-year-old Mexican man with a history of rheumatic heart disease. The literature is reviewed and the cultural
S. Werthamer, M. Weiner
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Subacute bacterial endocarditis in children. Current status.
A M A Journal of Diseases of Children, 1971The hospital records of children with subacute bacterial endocarditis (SBE) in the years 1964 through 1970 were studied to provide current figures for incidence and mortality of SBE.
R. Caldwell, R. Hurwitz, D. Girod
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Subacute Bacterial Endocarditis.
Archives of Internal Medicine, 1956Although in the last fifteen years the patter of the clinical puzzles presented by patients with febrile illness—fever of unexplained origin—has shifted away from infectious diseases toward neoplasms, lymphomas, leukemias, and collagen disorders, subacute bacterial endocarditis remains a challenging problem diagnostically, therapeutically, and in terms
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