Results 301 to 310 of about 262,774 (333)
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The Treatment of Syphilis

New England Journal of Medicine, 1964
IT may be some grim comfort to know that infectious syphilis has increased not only in the United States but in many other countries as well. At home, reported cases of infectious syphilis reached their peak in 1947 and then began a precipitous decline, which lasted for almost a decade.
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Syphilis

Nursing Standard, 2015
Essential facts Syphilis is caused by infection with the bacterium Treponema pallidum. It is transmitted by direct contact with an infectious lesion or by vertical transmission during pregnancy. Although the number of diagnoses of syphilis in the UK has risen substantially in the past decade, it remains one of the less common sexually transmitted ...
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Syphilis

Seminars in Perinatology, 1998
Syphilis was first recognized as a distinct syndrome in Europe in the fifteenth century. Despite knowledge of congenital infection for more than 450 years and the existence of adequate therapy for 55 years, congenital infection remains a problem for the practicing clinician. Syphilis is caused by Treponema pallidum.
L M, Hollier, S M, Cox
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Syphilis

2010
Abstract Syphilis results from infection with the spirochaete Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum, for which humans are the only known natural host. In adults it is transmitted primarily by sexual contact. The organism gains entry into the body through small breaks in the skin or the intact mucosal surfaces of the genitals, mouth, or anus,
Basil Donovan, Phillip Read
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Syphilis

New England Journal of Medicine, 1940
C. Guy Lane, G. Marshall Crawford
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Syphilis

New England Journal of Medicine, 1955
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DERMATOLOGY AND SYPHILIS

The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1923
Vaughn C. Garner, John H. Stokes
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Syphilis

Dermatology, 1949
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