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Takehomeexam
Takehomeexam

... 5. What are the categories of oral diseases? Dental caries Periodontal disease Other acquired oral conditions ...
Low G + C Gram-Positive Bacteria
Low G + C Gram-Positive Bacteria

... Bacterial Diseases of the Digestive System • Bacterial Gastroenteritis: C. diff. (Antimicrobial-Associated) Diarrhea • Epidemiology • By-product of modern medicine • Any antimicrobial can trigger the disease ...
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Slide 1

The Translator: The role of pharmacists in optimizing HIV
The Translator: The role of pharmacists in optimizing HIV

... key antiretroviral drug classes. Additionally, there are specific storage requirements and unpleasant side effects. Rigorous adherence to ART is critical for HIV/AIDS patients to lessen viral load and prolong survival. Deviation from the ART plan can lead to failed treatment, after which the drugs u ...
HCV / HIV CoInfeCtIon
HCV / HIV CoInfeCtIon

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... As you can see an exposure to HepB is much more transferable than HIV. HCV Based on limited studies, the risk for infection after a needlestick or cut exposure to HCV-infected blood is approximately 1.8%. The risk following a blood splash is unknown, but is believed to be extremely small; however, H ...
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Travel Medicine - Travel and Emergency Medicine

... Veterans Administration  ED is access point for services. ...
CELLS 219Q
CELLS 219Q

... The Black Plague killed about 100 million people in the fourteenth century. The bacteria that caused the plague was carried by fleas on rats and traveled great distances. Which would have most directly limited the spread of the disease? A. ...
Infection Prevention - Medical Center Hospital
Infection Prevention - Medical Center Hospital

... their belongings, such as toys or a leash After changing a diaper ...
Seroprevalence of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Among
Seroprevalence of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Among

... seroconversion is independent of the age or sex of the recipient, the reason for transfusion, and the type of component transfused (excluding washed red blood cells, which transmit HIV at a lower rate) (Donegan et al, 1990). HIV infectivity of red blood cell components that were not washed before tr ...
OSHA Bloodborne Pathogen Training
OSHA Bloodborne Pathogen Training

... Does Everyone Exposed To A Bloodborne Pathogen Become Infected? • Whether or not you become infected following an exposure depends on a number of factors including:  The number and strength of the germs from the source.  Your resistance to disease-the ability of your body (host) to reject the ger ...
Ch 41 - HIV AIDS
Ch 41 - HIV AIDS

STD Tri-fold Brochure - Medical Diagnostic Laboratories
STD Tri-fold Brochure - Medical Diagnostic Laboratories

... Despite the fact that over 19 million new cases of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) occur each year in the United States, they are still one of the most under-recognized health problems in the country. STDs affect men and women of all background and economic levels. They are most prevalent among ...
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Infectious Disease Topics

Seniors and Boomers: Living Longer, Living Healthier
Seniors and Boomers: Living Longer, Living Healthier

Georgia Dental Hygienists’ Association 2011
Georgia Dental Hygienists’ Association 2011

Living with HIV
Living with HIV

... of every four people infected with HIV do not yet know they have it! That’s because being HIV-positive is like having high blood pressure—it is a “silent” disease. The virus usually hides in your body for many years without causing any problems. That is one reason HIV is so widespread. Because peopl ...
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Antigen – any substance that induces an immune response by the

... • Infectious diseases are caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi, rickettsiae, helminthes, protozoa, and arthropods. These diseasecausing agents can enter an animal through the skin, mouth, mucous membranes, lungs, or reproductive tract. • Infectious diseases can also be spread by either direct or indir ...
GTIs - Dr.Amr Nadim
GTIs - Dr.Amr Nadim

... may be confused with those of other diseases not transmitted through sexual contact. ...
Drug Abuse and HIV
Drug Abuse and HIV

... injection drug users (IDUs). However, over the past 30 years, the boundaries between groups at greater and lesser risk for contracting the virus have been dissolving. From 2005 to 2008, estimated HIV diagnoses increased approximately 17 percent among MSM, particularly minority MSM. Risky sexual beha ...
MR Imaging in White Matter Diseases of the Brain and Spinal Cord
MR Imaging in White Matter Diseases of the Brain and Spinal Cord

... practices. Table 10.3, which highlights the suggested MR imaging techniques for evaluation of these children, is confusing, as is Table 10.4, which describes the scanning principles and scan techniques for technetium-Tc99 m bone scintigraphy. Appropriately, more emphasis is placed on the section reg ...
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Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion National Center for

... the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion ...
systemic disease and kidney involvement
systemic disease and kidney involvement

Oral Health Care for the HIV+ Patient
Oral Health Care for the HIV+ Patient

... • Despite more aggressive and earlier dental care and improved immune response (CD4+>350 cells//μL in 55% of patients) and controlled viral load, the presence of dental caries, periodontal disease and oral lesions among HIV infected patients is still significant. • Regular ongoing dental visits and ...
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Diseases of poverty

Diseases of poverty is a term sometimes used to collectively describe diseases, disabilities, and health conditions that are more prevalent among the poor than among wealthier people. In many cases poverty is considered the leading risk factor or determinant for such diseases, and in some cases the diseases themselves are identified as barriers to economic development that would end poverty. These diseases are in contrast to so-called ""diseases of affluence"", which are diseases thought to be a result of increasing wealth in a society. Diseases of poverty are often co-morbid and ubiquitous with malnutrition.
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