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Prosthetic Management of Cleft lip and Palate Patient with Oronasal
Prosthetic Management of Cleft lip and Palate Patient with Oronasal

... One option is a Removable Prosthesis as reported in different studies, including overdentures on natural teeth (as in our case) ...
- Wiley Online Library
- Wiley Online Library

clinical crown length, width - Pakistan Oral and Dental Journal
clinical crown length, width - Pakistan Oral and Dental Journal

... decades. Differences have been found not only over time but also with respect to age, gender, and various groups of individuals.2,3 Whether the situation is similar regarding dental appearance does not seem to have been studied, even though interest in dental esthetics has increased rapidly during t ...
Corticosteroids in the Treatment of Pseudomembranous Colitis: A
Corticosteroids in the Treatment of Pseudomembranous Colitis: A

... [5, 10]. Up to 25% of affected patients may develop pseudomembranous colitis and 1-3% progress to fulminant colitis [11, 12]. The overall case mortality of C. difficile associated disease has been reported as 2.2% but rises to 24% in fulminant colitis treated with colectomy, reaching 45% for those m ...
Vancomycin trough level
Vancomycin trough level

... Achieve central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO2) of > 70% ...
Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock - New England Journal of Medicine
Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock - New England Journal of Medicine

... dysfunction is often defined by the provision of supportive therapy (e.g., mechanical ventilation), and epidemiologic studies thus count the “treated incidence” rather than the actual incidence. In the United States, severe sepsis is recorded in 2% of patients admitted to the hospital. Of these pati ...
ERYTHEMA MULTIFORME MAJOR: CASE REPORT AND REVIEW
ERYTHEMA MULTIFORME MAJOR: CASE REPORT AND REVIEW

... completely cure the disease. Key-words: Erythema multiforme, Immune disorder, Target lesion. ...
HALITOSIS:Being Part of the Cure
HALITOSIS:Being Part of the Cure

... A good cleaning should be done at least once in the afternoon and then prior to soaking the prosthesis in a disinfecting solution for the evening. Wearing dentures during sleep when salivary flow is diminished will enhance the putrefaction process. Therefore, the patient who insists on keeping there ...
Connective Tissue Graft (gum graft) Surgery
Connective Tissue Graft (gum graft) Surgery

... Principal Risks and Complications: A small number of patients (usually around 5% or so) do not have the graft “take”. The usual causes are excessive shrinking of the graft tissue while healing the first couple of weeks, smoking, or the patient knocking the graft loose during the first week. So it m ...
Control in Acute-Care Settings Hospital Epidemiology and Infection
Control in Acute-Care Settings Hospital Epidemiology and Infection

... the mode of transmission of puerperal sepsis. Semmelweis was a Hungarian obstetrician at the Maternity Hospital in Vienna, Austria, who in 1847 noted higher rates of maternal mortality among patients cared for by obstetricians and medical students than among those cared for by midwives. At that time ...
2015 No. 1 - February March 2015
2015 No. 1 - February March 2015

... the stroke of a pen” as a particularly retrograde step, leading to what Dr Holohan termed the dentistry of 50 years ago – extraction and dentures. Surely we can do better. As the economy lifts, patients can reasonably expect better treatment. The Chief Dental Officer has power and influence and she ...
Link to pdf
Link to pdf

... dysfunction is often defined by the provision of supportive therapy (e.g., mechanical ventilation), and epidemiologic studies thus count the “treated incidence” rather than the actual incidence. In the United States, severe sepsis is recorded in 2% of patients admitted to the hospital. Of these pati ...
Journal of Advanced Computing (2012) 1: 1-6
Journal of Advanced Computing (2012) 1: 1-6

... with a wide ranges of manifestations, from only mild skin manifestation to severely debilitating fibrosis that involving skin and other organs including the subcutaneous tissues, muscles, lungs, pleura, pericardium, and bones.(Shabana et al., 2008;Robinson et al., 2011; Kribben et al.,2009). In our ...
Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock - Department of Critical Care
Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock - Department of Critical Care

... that the pathogenesis of multiple organ failure in As the concept of the host theory emerged, it was sepsis is not fundamentally different from that in first assumed that the clinical features of sepsis noninfectious critical illness.32 were the result of overly exuberant inflammation. Later, Bone e ...
Prostatitis - Society of Urologic Nurses and Associates
Prostatitis - Society of Urologic Nurses and Associates

... understanding. Acute and chronic bacterial prostatitis are relatively uncommon, but wellunderstood urinary tract infections caused by established uropathogens. They are typically responsive to appropriate antimicrobial therapy. By contrast, the much more common nonbacterial prostatitis and prostatod ...
1 - PGOcclusion
1 - PGOcclusion

... Le Gall MG, and Lauret JF, 1998, March, 10(2), 225-229, PPAD, Dental News in Science, The Function of Mastication: Implications for occlusal Therapy. Levy PH., 1975, July, Vol. 19, No. 3, pp429-430, DCNA, Forward, With the broadening of our perspective and conceptual options, we are from time to tim ...
25-26TH
25-26TH

... A series of studies in Baboons permitted a better understanding of the problems related to carriage and spread associated with aP, and it became clear that even widespread vaccination with aP will not prevent transmission of disease to the neonates – the group at the highest risk for severs disease ...
Chronic Viral Hepatitis in the Pediatric Population
Chronic Viral Hepatitis in the Pediatric Population

... Prevention HCV Acquired Immunity to HCV Infection The majority of re-exposed individuals do not develop chronic disease Risk for chronic infection after re-exposure to HCV was 12fold lower among persons with prior HCV infection Mehta 2002 Lancet ...
Pharyngeal diphtheria
Pharyngeal diphtheria

... cultured from the floor dust for 5 weeks or longer, once the floor dust was ...
Sexually Transmitted and Bloodborne Pathogens
Sexually Transmitted and Bloodborne Pathogens

Sepsis - acdis
Sepsis - acdis

Genital Herpes - Jason Carter MD
Genital Herpes - Jason Carter MD

Microbiota, immune development and function
Microbiota, immune development and function

Prevention Recognition Treatment
Prevention Recognition Treatment

... All healthcare professionals should be aware of the signs and symptoms of maternal sepsis and septic shock and of their rapid and potentially lethal course. Suspicion of significant sepsis should trigger an urgent referral/transfer to secondary or tertiary care. Sepsis is infection plus systemic man ...
Recommendations for the treatment of osteomyelitis
Recommendations for the treatment of osteomyelitis

... bone tissue caused by an infectious agent. This infection may be hematogenic, contiguous to an adjacent infectious focus, or even the result of direct bacterial inoculation from a traumatic mechanism. In general, hematogenous osteomyelitis is caused by a single agent, while other types can show poly ...
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Focal infection theory

In focal infection theory (FIT), a localized infection, typically obscure, disseminates microorganisms or their toxins elsewhere within the individual's own body and thereby injuries distant sites, where ensuing dysfunction yields clinical signs and symptoms and eventually disease, perhaps systemic and usually chronic, such as arthritis, atherosclerosis, cancer, or mental illness. (Distant injury is focal infection's key principle, whereas in ordinary infectious disease, the infection itself is systemic, as in measles, or the initially infected site is readily identified and invasion progresses contiguously, as in gangrene.) This ancient concept took modern form around 1900, and was widely accepted in Anglosphere medicine by the 1920s.In the theory, the focus of infection is often unrecognized, while secondary infections might occur at sites particularly susceptible to such microbial species or toxin. Several locations were commonly claimed as foci—appendix, urinary bladder, gall bladder, kidney, liver, prostate, and nasal sinus—but most commonly oral tissues. Not only chronically infected tonsils and dental decay, but also sites of dental restoration and root canal therapy were indicted as the foci. The putative oral sepsis was countered by tonsillectomies and tooth extractions, including of endodontically treated teeth and even of apparently healthy teeth, newly popular approaches—sometimes leaving individuals toothless—to treat or prevent diverse chronic diseases.Drawing severe criticism in the 1930s, focal infection theory, whose popularity zealously exceeded consensus evidence, was generally discarded in the 1940s amid overwhelming consensus of its general falsity, whereupon dental restorations and root canal therapy became again favored. Untreated endodontic disease retained recognition as fostering systemic disease, but only alternative medicine and later biological dentistry continued highlighting sites of dental treatment—root canal therapy, dental implant, and, as newly claimed, tooth extraction, too—as foci of infection promoting systemic diseases. The primary recognition of focal infection is endocarditis if oral bacteria enter blood and infect the heart, perhaps its valves.Entering the 21st century, scientific evidence supporting general relevance of focal infection theory remained slim, yet evolved understandings of disease mechanisms had established a third possible mechanism—altogether, metastasis of infection, metastatic toxic injury, and, as recently revealed, metastatic immunologic injury—that might occur simultaneously and even interact. Meanwhile, focal infection theory has gained renewed attention, as dental infections apparently are widespread and significant contributors to systemic diseases, although mainstream attention is on ordinary periodontal disease, not hypotheses of stealth infections via dental treatment. Despite some doubts renewed in the 1990s by critics of conventional dentistry, dentistry scholars maintain that endodontic therapy can be performed without creating focal infections.
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