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Microorganisms and Human Disease (Chapters 21
Microorganisms and Human Disease (Chapters 21

... animal feces → intestinal mucosa, multiplies in cells → diarrhea → blood & lymph → organ infections → septic shock, requires high dose to be infectious mortality 1% due to shock Typhoid fever – Salmonella typhi: Gram – bacilli oral fecal route of transmission carriers: organism in gallbladder, shed ...
Management of the Oral Infection: Part 1
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... Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA was created as part of the U.S. Department of Labor. OSHA enforces safety and health standards in the workplace. The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 established the Hazard Communication Rule that requires manufacturers to assess hazards a ...
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Sexually Transmitted Infections

... Infectivity is thought to be approximately 60% with an incubation period of 2-8 months (Adler 1995) Only a small proportion of infected patients develop macroscopic genital warts, the remainder go undetected. Once in the epithelium it proliferates causing a wart formation ...
Aminoglycosides(氨基糖苷类)
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A 34-Day-Old With Fever, Cerebrospinal Fluid
A 34-Day-Old With Fever, Cerebrospinal Fluid

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Answers to those burning questions - 8/2/2012
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Soft Tissue Infections: Abscesses, Cellulitis and Necrotizing Fasciitis
Soft Tissue Infections: Abscesses, Cellulitis and Necrotizing Fasciitis

... Lee, M. C. et al (2004). Management and outcome of children with skin and soft tissue abscesses caused by communityacquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Pediatric Infectious Diseases, 23.2, 123-127. Liu, C. et al (2011). Clinical Practice Guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society ...
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NOSOCOMIAL ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANT ORGANISMS

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... allergy history. Without a full picture of the patient’s antibiotic allergy history a physician might be prevented from using a first line drug which would treat a given infection more effectively than an alternative antibiotic and do it without much risk. The key here is not only to find out to whi ...
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... review raised concerns that deaths due to antimicrobial resistance could outweigh mortality from all other causes by 2050, if action is not taken (0.7m annual deaths worldwide, rising to a possible 10m annual deaths in 2050).38 Drug resistance can be minimised by ensuring that drugs are used only wh ...
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... Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) is a type of staph bacteria that is resistant to certain antibiotics called beta-lactams. These antibiotics include methicillin and other more common antibiotics such as oxacillin, penicillin, and amoxicillin. In the community, most MRSA infections ...
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Home hygiene, pets and other domestic animals
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...  A Canadian study showed that C. difficile was the most frequently isolated pathogen from dogs. C. difficile was isolated from 58 (58%) of 102 faecal specimens, of which 41 isolates were disease-causing strains. Although there is little data indicating the extent of the infection risk from animals ...
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... A novel anti-Giardia oral vaccine for domestic animals prevents establishment of infection, alleviates chronic giardiasis, and decreases parasite transmission to humans. The flagellated protozoan Giardia lamblia (syn. G. duodenalis or G. intestinalis) is one of the most common causes of human intest ...
Acute Respiratory Infection
Acute Respiratory Infection

... Corynebacterium diphtheriae is a small Gram-positive bacillus. Corynebacterium is poorly invasive. – Effects of infection are due to the exotoxin. Local effects include epithelial cell necrosis and inflammation. Pseudomembrane is composed of a mixture of fibrin, leukocytes, cell debris. – Size varie ...
What are Healthcare Associated Infections?
What are Healthcare Associated Infections?

...  Compliance with Health and Social Care Act (2008)  Local procedures and guidance  Additional information could include:  At least 300,000 Healthcare Associated Infections  5,000 patients die as a direct result of HCAI and it is one of the factors in another 15,000 deaths.  Patients with a HCA ...
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Anaerobic infection

Anaerobic infections are caused by anaerobic bacteria. Anaerobic bacteria do not grow on solid media in room air (0.04% carbon dioxide and 21% oxygen); facultative anaerobic bacteria can grow in the presence as well as in the absence of air. Microaerophilic bacteria do not grow at all aerobically or grow poorly, but grow better under 10% carbon dioxide or anaerobically. Anaerobic bacteria can be divided into strict anaerobes that can not grow in the presence of more than 0.5% oxygen and moderate anaerobic bacteria that are able of growing between 2 to 8% oxygen. Anaerobic bacteria usually do not possess catalase, but some can generate superoxide dismutase which protects them from oxygen.The clinically important anaerobes in decreasing frequency are: 1. Six genera of Gram-negative rods (Bacteroides, Prevotella, Porphyromonas, Fusobacterium, Bilophila and Sutterella spp.);2. Gram-positive cocci (primarily Peptostreptococcus spp.); 3. Gram-positive spore-forming (Clostridium spp.) and nonspore-forming bacilli (Actinomyces, Propionibacterium, Eubacterium, Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium spp.); and 4. Gram-negative cocci (mainly Veillonella spp.) .The frequency of isolation of anaerobic bacterial strains varies in different infectious sites. Mixed infections caused by numerous aerobic and anaerobic bacteria are often observed in clinical situations.Anaerobic bacteria are a common cause of infections, some of which can be serious and life-threatening. Because anaerobes are the predominant components of the skin's and mucous membranes normal flora, they are a common cause infections of endogenous origin. Because of their fastidious nature, anaerobes are hard to isolate and are often not recovered from infected sites. The administration of delayed or inappropriate therapy against these organisms may lead to failures in eradication of these infections. The isolation of anaerobic bacteria requires adequate methods for collection, transportation and cultivation of clinical specimens. The management of anaerobic infection is often difficult because of the slow growth of anaerobic organisms, which can delay their identification by the frequent polymicrobial nature of these infections and by the increasing resistance of anaerobic bacteria to antimicrobials.
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