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Diarrhea - Carnegie Hill Endoscopy
Diarrhea - Carnegie Hill Endoscopy

... function properly. Dehydration is particularly dangerous in children and the elderly, and it must be treated promptly to avoid serious health problems. Dehydration is discussed on page 3. ...
Legionella 1 - World Health Organization
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the bubonic plague
the bubonic plague

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... but when Arias and colleagues (1993) studied the problem of preterm labor in 105 women, they found that essentially two distinct subgroups exist: those with infection (n = 63) and those with decidual vasculopathy (n = 42). Moreover, Oyarzún et al. (1998) have shown a remarkable increase in identifyi ...
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Ebola Questions and Answers - Penrhyn Bay Medical Centre

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Rapid early innate control of hepatitis C virus during IFN

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Measles is a serious disease * Vaccination is the only effective

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... Anthrax toxin is made up of three proteins: protective antigen (PA), edema factor (EF), and lethal factor (LF).  PA binds to specific cell receptors, and following proteolytic activation it forms a membrane channel that mediates entry of EF and LF into the cell.  EF is an adenylyl cyclase; with PA ...
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... 1. Shallow erosions present on the entrance of the nostrils, mouth, pharynx, larynx, oesophagus, rumen omasum, abomasum caecum and less frequently in Peyer's patches in the small intestine. 2. Erythema of the mucosa with submucosal haemorrhage in the abomasum, small intestine, caecum and colon. Stri ...
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Exposing the Myth of the GERM THEORY
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The correlation between infectivity and incubation period of measles
The correlation between infectivity and incubation period of measles

... case was infected by the first, the first by the second, or whether they were both infected in the community. While many analyses of the serial interval of measles were performed with Hope Simpson’s (1952) or Kenyan datasets (Aaby and Leeuwenburg, 1990), the present study used two datasets with larger ...
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Hospital-acquired infection



Hospital-acquired infection (HAI) — also known as nosocomial infection — is an infection whose development is favored by a hospital environment, such as one acquired by a patient during a hospital visit or one developing among hospital staff. In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated roughly 1.7 million hospital-associated infections, from all types of microorganisms, including bacteria, combined, cause or contribute to 99,000 deaths each year. In Europe, where hospital surveys have been conducted, the category of gram-negative infections are estimated to account for two-thirds of the 25,000 deaths each year. Nosocomial infections can cause severe pneumonia and infections of the urinary tract, bloodstream and other parts of the body. Many types are difficult to attack with antibiotics, and antibiotic resistance is spreading to gram-negative bacteria that can infect people outside the hospital.Hospital-acquired infections are an important category of hospital-acquired conditions. HAI is sometimes expanded as healthcare-associated infection to emphasize that infections can be correlated with health care in various settings (not just hospitals), which is also true of hospital-acquired conditions generally.
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