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The Death of Endodontics...Is There Life After Death?
The Death of Endodontics...Is There Life After Death?

... The Death of Endodontics – Is There Life After Death? The word “Zombie” has several interesting definitions. Zombie can mean: 1. a person considered to lack energy, enthusiasm, or the ability to think independently 2. a spirit that supposedly brings a dead body back to life again 3. a hidden softwar ...
Address to the conference of the Norwegian Dental Association
Address to the conference of the Norwegian Dental Association

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Burn lecture postg 2008

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Chronic granulomatous disorder A guide for medical
Chronic granulomatous disorder A guide for medical

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Acute Q Fever - Turner White

... weapon in a terrorist attack. The most likely scenario would be spreading of the organism in an aerosol form that could be inhaled by targeted populations. However, because of its low virulence and inability to cause acute fatal disease, C. burnetii may not be effective as a biologic weapon. CONCLUS ...
наробки кафедри (04) – 2004 (05) – 2005 (06) – 2006 (07) – 2007
наробки кафедри (04) – 2004 (05) – 2005 (06) – 2006 (07) – 2007

... D. Medium term of the incubatory period E. High virulence activator 17.* The child of 9 months old has got measles, in the first day of rash appearance he was hospitalized. His brother of 4 years old, who contacted with him did not have measles and was ...
Dental - West Shore Community College
Dental - West Shore Community College

... use PPO dentists (in states where permitted by law). To find a PPO dentist near you, please visit mibluedentist.com or call 1-888-826-8152. ...
What Every Transplant Patient Needs to Know About Dental Care
What Every Transplant Patient Needs to Know About Dental Care

Strategies for Reduction in Duration of Antibiotic Use in Hospitalized
Strategies for Reduction in Duration of Antibiotic Use in Hospitalized

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Continuing Dental Education

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respiratory infectious disease burden in australia

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isolation policy - Somerset Partnership NHS Foundation Trust

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A 21-year-old woman comes to the university health clinic

... enough to warrant chemoprophylaxis. Rifampin, ceftriaxone, and ciprofloxacin are the 3 recommended agents used as chemoprophylaxis for invasive meningococcal disease. A serogroup-specific quadrivalent meningococcal vaccine (choice A) is used to prevent cases of invasive meningococcal disease. It is ...
What Every Transplant Patient Needs to Know About Dental Care
What Every Transplant Patient Needs to Know About Dental Care

... soups, cottage cheese, and yogurt can help relieve the pain. Drinking cold fluids will also help. There are some over-the-counter medicines that can be applied to the ulcer and surrounding area to decrease pain. Patients who have ulcers that are very painful may find relief with a medicine that numb ...
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Update on Diabetic Macular Edema - aocoo-hns
Update on Diabetic Macular Edema - aocoo-hns

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Informed Consent Form
Informed Consent Form

... If this occurs, the broken piece may be left in your mouth or may be surgically removed. This may require referral to another dental specialist. When inserting the device(s), it is possible to damage the root of a tooth, a nerve, or to perforate the maxillary sinus. Usually these problems are not si ...
Abstracts for my Research 27-11
Abstracts for my Research 27-11

... INTRODUCTION: The aim of this study was to investigate whether there is a relationship between self-reported bullying because of dentofacial features and oral health-related quality of life among a representative sample of Jordanian schoolchildren. METHODS: This was a cross-sectional study in which ...
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Radioactive Compounds In Dental Materials?

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Dr. Burrascano`s Treatment Guidelines

... There are changes in the clinical presentation of the co-infected patient as compared to when each infection is present individually. There may be different symptoms and atypical signs. There may be decreased reliability of standard diagnostic tests, and most importantly, there is recognition that c ...
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... The generic name given to joint disease is arthropathy. The arthropathies can be divided into two categories: non-inflammatory joint disease and inflammatory joint disease. The most prevalent of the non-inflammatory group is osteoarthritis or to give it its other name, degenerative joint disease. Th ...
“What empiric antifungal antibiotic would you use for meningitis?”
“What empiric antifungal antibiotic would you use for meningitis?”

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... latitudes. The track is hilly covered by Shivalik range and the elevation varies from 4501,100 metres (3). This region is rich in diverse flora and suitable for ethnobotanical explorations. Various plants are used for many diseases and for dental hygiene. The mouth is a mirror that can reflect the h ...
April 2015 - New York State Dental Association
April 2015 - New York State Dental Association

... someone without a disability. Special needs patients need dental treatment, just like all other patients. However, during a typical dental education, students aren’t exposed much to special needs patients—which may be one reason these patients find it hard to find a dentist who will care for them. I ...
Recent advances in the epidemiology, prevention, diagnosis, and Melanie W. Pound
Recent advances in the epidemiology, prevention, diagnosis, and Melanie W. Pound

< 1 ... 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 ... 263 >

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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