Results 231 to 240 of about 453,159 (270)
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Hypercalcaemia in a child with miliary tuberculosis

European Journal of Pediatrics, 1989
Hypercalcaemia and hypercalciuria were diagnosed in a 21-week-old boy with miliary tuberculosis. The tuberculosis was treated with isoniazid, rifampin and streptomycin. After 2 months, streptomycin was replaced by ethambutol. The hypercalcaemia was treated initially with prednisone, which decreased the serum 1.25 (OH)2 cholecalciferol level but the ...
Jorrit Gerritsen, K. Knol
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Chronic miliary tuberculosis

British Journal of Tuberculosis and Diseases of the Chest, 1947
Summary The case is recorded of a young woman who suffered from a preretinal h˦morrhage followed a few months later by neurological symptoms which proved eventually to have been due to tuberculomas of the brain and cerebellum. After having made an apparent recovery for a year, she then developed renal tuberculosis and was found to have miliary ...
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Air Leak in Miliary Tuberculosis

The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2009
A 4-year-old white boy presented with a 2-week history of non-productive cough, fever, and malaise. There was no history of contact with tuberculosis. He was tachypneic and had bilateral crepitations. A plain chest radiograph showed miliary shadowing ( Figure 1 ). Over the next 36 hours, he continued to deteriorate, with increasing respiratory distress
Benjamin D. Lakin   +2 more
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Calcified Miliary Tuberculosis of the Spleen

The British Journal of Radiology, 1957
Tuberculosis may be considered as the most common cause of splenic calcification. The other lesions that may ultimately calcify are infarct, hydatid disease, abscess, phleboliths and encysted haematoma (Shanks and Kerley, 1950). Haematogenous dissemination must begin with bacteraemia which is almost invariably present in primary tuberculous infection ...
A. Z. Shafei, M. G. Massoud
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MILIARY TUBERCULOSIS, TUBERCULOSIS OF RIBS, AND HEROIN ADDICTION

The Lancet, 1970
Blood-borne infection is a common complication of the self-administration of drugs of dependence by the intravenous routes. British drug addicts are notorious for their disregard of even the most elementary hygienic precautions. They will use dirty needles and syringes, which are often being used by other addicts as well.
Julius Merry, B. M. Gompels
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Consumption Coagulopathy in Miliary Tuberculosis

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1969
Abstract A 56-year-old woman required hospitalization and endotracheal intubation because of progressive respiratory distress associated with bilateral diffuse pulmonary infiltrates.
William R. Barclay   +3 more
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The Pathogenesis of Pulmonary and Miliary Tuberculosis

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1979
Tuberculosis is spread from human to human by airborne transmission; it is not a highly infectious disease. Primary infection remits in 90% of cases and is progressive in the remainder; it is accompanied by lymphohematogenous seeding of many organs, and reactivation may occur as early as three months or many years after initial infection.
Eugene F. Geppert, Alan R. Leff
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Miliary Tuberculosis

New England Journal of Medicine, 2020
Jerald Pelayo, Kathleen Ruddiman
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Tuberculosis miliaris ulcerosa mucosae

Der Hautarzt, 2003
Ein 36-jahriger Patient in reduziertem Allgemeinzustand wurde zur diagnostischen Abklarung eines seit mehreren Monaten bestehenden schmerzhaften Ulkus an der Zungenspitze stationar aufgenommen. Der Tuberkulin-Tine-Test war positiv. In Sputum, Magensaft sowie in Ulkusabstrichen wurde kulturell Mycobacterium tuberculosis nachgewiesen.
Daniela Bruch-Gerharz   +3 more
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Streptomycin in Miliary Tuberculosis and Tuberculous Meningitis

Acta Paediatrica, 1949
SummaryHematogenic tuberculosis can be healed by streptomycin. The author stresses the fact that up to now only about 10–15 % of the cases have been cured, that a number of factors concerning streptomycin still are obscure, that streptomycin is toxic and that its effect is mainly bacteriostatic.RésuméLa tuberculose hématogéne peut êre guérie par la ...
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