Results 191 to 200 of about 40,430 (211)
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Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinics of North America, 1989
The incidence of infectious syphilis is increasing in the United States, particularly among women. Not surprisingly, congenital syphilis rates have also risen. These have led to a rekindling of interest in the manifestations and treatment of primary, secondary, and latent syphilis.
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The incidence of infectious syphilis is increasing in the United States, particularly among women. Not surprisingly, congenital syphilis rates have also risen. These have led to a rekindling of interest in the manifestations and treatment of primary, secondary, and latent syphilis.
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Gestational and Congenital Syphilis
Clinics in Perinatology, 1988The frequency of congenital syphilis continues to increase throughout the United States during the 1980s. Untreated maternal infection can lead to stillbirth, premature labor, congenital infection, and neonatal death. Preventive measures, based on control of early syphilis in women, prenatal care, improved diagnosis and diligent followup, can help to ...
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CHORIORETINITIS OF CONGENITAL SYPHILIS
Archives of Ophthalmology, 1953THE PURPOSE of this study is to determine the incidence of chorioretinitis in children with congenital syphilis, especially with interstitial keratitis; to compare our findings with the well-known classification of Sidler-Huguenin; to discuss the frequency and diagnostic significance of perivasculitis in the eyegrounds of patients with congenital ...
George P. Meyer, Joseph V. Klauder
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Syphilis Complicating Pregnancy and Congenital Syphilis
New England Journal of Medicine(Abstracted from N Engl J Med 2024;390:242–253) Passage of the bacteria Treponema pallidum through the placenta is a known cause of congenital syphilis and continues to represent a global disease burden. Since 2001, rates of syphilis have increased in individuals of reproductive age and in infants, with rates reaching their highest in nearly ...
Irene A. Stafford +2 more
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CONGENITAL SYPHILIS OF THE STOMACH
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1954Excerpt Tertiary syphilis of the stomach has always been a rather uncommon finding. Estimates of incidence vary from 0.1 per cent of syphilitic patients (Chase, quoted by Eusterman) to 4 per cent o...
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