There are no pus cells in the stool, thereby ruling out a bacterial diarrhea like shigella dysentery. |
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Cucumber and melon plants infected with or killed by bacterial wilt should be pulled up and placed in a closed garbage container. |
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When the bacterial cell divides, only one daughter cell in each generation contains the exogenote which is transmitted unilinearly. |
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Certain genes, called vps genes, enable V. cholerae to stick together in bacterial communities, or biofilms, in both fresh and salt water. |
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The understanding that these biofilms are dynamic bacterial communities provides targets for therapy. |
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Such other clostridials include black disease, blackleg, braxy, bacterial redwater and tetanus. |
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The presence of low-attenuating lymph nodes was found to be significant for further differentiating mycobacterial and bacterial infections. |
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Even worse, bacterial biofilms are very resistant to antibiotics and biocides. |
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Common onion diseases include damping off, botrytis leaf blight, downy mildew, and bacterial blight. |
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Other viral, bacterial, treponemal and fungal agents have the potential to cause mouth ulcers. |
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Among the civilians, 30,000 died from firepower, 25,000 were injured and another 30,000 died from the poison gas and bacterial bioweapons. |
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Acute ulcerative gingivitis, also known as Vincent's disease or trench mouth, is due to a bacterial infection of the gums. |
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If you shave your bikini line, skip the moisturizer and dab on an anti bacterial cream instead. |
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Anyway, I thought, a nice bacterial infection might zap the mystery virus that's laid me low for the past year or so. |
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The DNA transposons resemble typical bacterial transposons, they have terminal inverted repeats which enclose the transposase gene. |
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Their attempts to genetically engineer spider silk relied on the use of bacterial, yeast, or plant cells. |
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If you are given treatment for a bacterial infection with the antibiotics ampicillin or amoxycillin, you may develop a rash of small red spots. |
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Chlamydia trachomatis is the most common sexually transmitted bacterial pathogen in the United States. |
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The berries then swell suddenly and often split, resulting in fungal and bacterial infection of the bunches. |
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Tissue was sent from the surgical bench to microbiology for fungal, mycobacterial, and bacterial cultures, and for flow cytometry. |
|
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Fungal or mycobacterial infections usually have an indolent and protracted course but can mimic bacterial arthritis. |
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We describe two children with recurrent bacterial meningitis due to cranial anatomical defects in whom diagnosis was delayed. |
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The main source of bacterial growth in whirlpool tubs is the residue which accumulates in the piping. |
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They're naturally gifted with strong stomachs and a powerful resistance to viral and bacterial agents. |
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Resistant to 3 races of bacterial leaf spot, this hybrid has excellent yields and impressive size. |
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Other problems that could be bothersome include mildew, leaf spot, and bacterial blight. |
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A good portion of antibiotic use appears to be for viral or spontaneously resolving bacterial infections. |
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When restudied in the stable clinical state, the incidence of a positive bacterial culture was similar for both groups. |
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Serious decay can occur at the base of branches and they must be inspected annually for fungal and bacterial damage. |
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These results demonstrated that immobilized recombinant bacterial sensing cells could be used reproducibly in a biosensor device. |
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The worldwide emergence of bacterial resistance to antibacterial agents has produced a need for new methods of combating bacterial infections. |
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If you have a bacterial infection, your GP may prescribe a short course of antibiotics. |
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Conjunctivitis can also be a symptom of other infections such as measles or leptospirosis, a bacterial infection. |
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In conventionally ventilated rooms, bacterial counts were consistently high and were not significantly influenced by OR attire. |
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Painful skin ulcers with gangrenous margins may be a feature of mixed bacterial infections. |
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Our urine mutagenicity testing did not provide evidence of increased numbers of bacterial strain revertants. |
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No evidence shows an increased risk from vaccinating pregnant women with inactivated virus or bacterial vaccines or toxoids. |
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Alternate methods of diagnosing pneumococcal disease are based on the detection of bacterial antigens in body fluids. |
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The filtered water is then treated with bleaching powder to get rid of bacterial impurities. |
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There are a number of causes of meningitis, including viral and bacterial infections. |
|
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Most bacterial infections can be treated with one or a couple of drugs in a matter of days or a week or so. |
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One of the biggest threats in modern medicine is bacterial resistance to antimicrobial agents. |
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Post-infectious glomerulonephritis has also been associated with other bacterial, viral, parasitic, rickettsial and fungal infections. |
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Other viral, bacterial, and rickettsial diseases have also created a niche for themselves in response to behavioral and environmental changes. |
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This may be a bacterial infection or following the ingestion of plant or chemical toxins. |
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The latter is highly conserved across many bacterial and archaebacterial species. |
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Sure, any time we crush bacterial cells for research, it's a sacrifice of a tiny microscopic life. |
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Urine may become stagnant leading to chronic ascending bacterial urinary tract infections. |
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Patients who have cirrhosis with ascites are prone to spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. |
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A person with cystic fibrosis produces thick, sticky mucus that provides a perfect breeding ground for bacterial growth. |
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Energy from the grain apparently helps complete the conversion of nitrate to bacterial protein in the rumen. |
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In a new study, researchers show that special viruses are the culprits behind the emergence of virulent select new bacterial strains. |
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They will help only if your child has a bacterial infection along with her mono, such as strep throat. |
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The overall bacterial processing of iron is thought to play a substantial role in the biogeochemical cycling of iron in the ocean. |
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Aquatic sediments host much of the bacterial biomass and biodiversity and play a key role in biogeochemical cycles. |
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Dolomite as a possible product of bacterial methanogenesis is absent in sediments from the Marnes Bleues Formation. |
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Sadly, my vet did not iodine the umbilical cords, and I lost three to bacterial septicemia before IV antibiotics stemmed the tide. |
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At first, glandular fever is sometimes wrongly diagnosed, for example as a bacterial throat infection or tonsillitis. |
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Sometimes a secondary bacterial infection of the tonsils occurs, and this is usually treated with the antibiotic penicillin. |
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Earlier studies found that pregnant pigs vaccinated against bacterial intimin developed antibodies against it in their sera and colostrum. |
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These conditions favor attachment and growth of bacteria and allow for a greatly increased bacterial density. |
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The system relies on short DNA sequences in bacterial messenger RNA that bind selectively to a specific small molecule. |
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They do not absorb dirt or liquids, and their surfaces are much less conducive to bacterial growth than paper bills. |
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Cholesterol taken up by bacterial cells in the intestine is unlikely to be available for absorption into the blood. |
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Interestingly, serum enhanced the phagocytic ability of acanthamoebae, as measured by bacterial uptake. |
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Valproic acid is an anticonvulsant drug used to treat various seizures and tobramycin is an antibiotic used to control many bacterial infections. |
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Members of this group are also unusual among bacteria for the arrangement of axial filaments, which are otherwise similar to bacterial flagella. |
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However, bacterial decomposition had saturated the Vasa's oaken beams with hydrogen sulfide, which eventually created a huge reservoir of sulfur. |
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Pinkeye, also known as conjunctivitis, is a contagious and painful bacterial infection of the mucous membrane that lines your eyelids. |
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Resistance to quinolones can also develop because of alterations in bacterial permeability and the development of efflux pumps. |
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Those ailments included scabies, a parasitic skin infection, and impetigo, a bacterial infection linked to poor sanitation. |
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Magnolia scale and bacterial leaf spot are sometimes apparent but seldom life-threatening. |
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If left untreated, the scale may become thick, yellow and greasy and, occasionally, secondary bacterial infection may occur. |
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Lactic acid acidifies crop contents, making them less conducive to bacterial growth. |
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In patients with superimposed bacterial infection, septicaemia develops and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. |
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Other ingredients such as propolis, myrrh, tea tree and echinacea can help slow bacterial growth, strengthen gum tissue and prevent inflammation. |
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Doctor-recommended remedies for airborne allergies, acid reflux, and bacterial infection didn't work. |
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The similarity of the bacterial floras associated with the apical surface of the parasite tegument and the intestine of the host should be noted. |
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The pneumococcal bacterium is the second most common cause of bacterial meningitis. |
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The human bacterial pathogen C. jejuni was present in 42 percent of the samples. |
|
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Cultured butter has active bacterial cultures added to it, just like yogurt. |
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Insects may transmit viral or bacterial diseases, or they may injure plants, providing entry points for pathogens. |
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I now believe that the bacterial flora of my stomach and colon has changed irrevocably, for the worst. |
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Suitable vectors are the DNAs of bacterial viruses or bacteriophages which naturally infect bacteria and replicate within them. |
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However, another promising approach is to use bacterial viruses knows as bacteriophages to produce vaccines very rapidly and cheaply. |
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Doxycycline acts bacteriostatically by binding with ribosomes and thus inhibiting the bacterial protein synthesis. |
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In the absence of symptoms, chronic bacterial prostatitis is sometimes discovered by the presence of bacteriuria. |
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They test candidate bacterial isolates for control of take-all by seed bacterization at Mt. Vernon, taking advantage of this situation. |
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This is the same bacterial nerve toxin that causes botulism, an illness which causes muscle weakness or paralysis. |
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Had they made any progress towards weaponising their chemical and bacterial agents? |
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The bacterial population of a cast is much greater than the bacterial population of either ingested soil, or the earthworm's gut. |
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She is rabbiting on about antibiotics and bacterial resistance, which have nothing to do with the financial review debate. |
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Now health chiefs are considering whether a further jab which fights bacterial meningitis, septicemia and pneumonia could save lives. |
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Test stool sample and scrapings to identify amoebic, bacterial, fungal or other parasitic problems. |
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Secondary bacterial infection can cause hardening and thickening of the skin, known as elephantiasis. |
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Once a wound is obtained, healing depends on the ability to maintain bacterial balance. |
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In dry caves, preservation is often excellent, due to moistureless air and limited bacterial activity. |
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Cranberry may be beneficial in these cases as it prevents bacterial adherence to bladder epithelia. |
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A healthy colon with adequate mucus production and appropriate bacterial colonization prevents the adherence of pathogenic bacteria. |
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The consequence is that secondary bacterial infection is quite common in diseased skin. |
|
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In one type of biofilm, bacterial cells are embedded more randomly in a slime layer which often mediates adherence of cells to surfaces. |
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In acute bacterial sinusitis, the nose merely acts as a conduit for eliminating purulent secretions produced in the sinuses. |
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The gold standard for diagnosis of bacterial rhinosinusitis is sinus puncture with aspiration of purulent secretions. |
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A large amount of the progeny phages were separated from the bacterial media by multiple steps of sedimentation and resuspension. |
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Segmentation of the RNA genome is a feature shared by a variety of animal, plant, and bacterial viruses. |
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Numerous bacterial and fungal species have been cultured from the mouths of alligators. |
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In doing so, this mucus becomes a culture medium for further bacterial growth, aggravating the state of recurrent infections. |
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Neisseria meningitidis, the meningococcus, is a globally distributed cause of bacterial meningitis and septicemia. |
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The three cases are all believed to be bacterial, caused by the meningococcal bacteria, but the strains involved have not been confirmed. |
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The most common form of vitamin K2 in animals is menaquinone 4, produced by the processing of exogenous and bacterial naphthoquinones. |
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The most common forms of the bug were now strain C of the bacterial meningococcal meningitis and its blood poisoning relative, septicaemia. |
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The etiologic spectrum of pathogens was broad, including opportunistic as well as bacterial agents. |
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Complications in herpetic whitlow include bacterial infection of the sore and possible spread of the virus. |
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The addition of scavengers suggests that reactive oxygen species caused this bacterial growth inhibition. |
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The three bacterial species used to initially inoculate treatments grew readily on nutrient agar. |
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Plasmid manipulation and bacterial transformation were performed by standard techniques. |
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Both stages can carry bacterial wilt or cucumber mosaic virus, diseases that will quickly kill the plant. |
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Hand washing with antiseptic soap or hand rubbing with alcohol-based disinfectant significantly reduced bacterial counts compared to hand washing with unmedicated soap. |
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If symptoms aren't improving in that time, see your doctor to make sure you don't have a bacterial infection in your lungs, larynx, trachea, sinuses or ears. |
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These are likely to be unhelpful to women with bacterial vaginosis because the lactobacilli are directed at the wrong anatomical site and are of the wrong kind. |
|
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The bacterial onslaught changes the bone by riddling it with tiny holes. |
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However, once participants stopped pulling oil, bacterial counts began to increase. |
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Particular scientific interest has been focused on bacterial diversity in our intestines. |
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A form of bacterial wilt which withers healthy banana plants and prematurely ripens fruits into a smelly goo is destroying crops and livelihoods as it moves across Uganda. |
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Also known as parrot fever, this bacterial illness can occur when people have contact with infected bird feces or with the dust that accumulates in birdcages. |
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After their split, Jim Friel died shockingly at age 48 of bacterial meningitis. |
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The rise in bacterial resistance has prompted recommendations that allopathic doctors prescribe fewer antibiotics, which, in turn, has led to a search for alternatives. |
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A response to antipyretic medication does not change the likelihood of a child having serious bacterial infection and should not be used for clinical decision-making. |
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Development of bacterial blight is promoted by cool, wet weather. |
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The second question involves whether a response to antipyretic medication is associated with a lower likelihood of serious bacterial infection in young children. |
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Cultures were negative for bacterial, fungal, and mycobacterial pathogens. |
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This study offers new perspectives to clarifying our understanding of the specific phenotypes of bacterial biofilms and thus enables control of their development. |
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It's a natural, bacterial toxin used by organic farmers for years. |
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While antibiotics are hardly a silver bullet and they are useless against viruses, they raise the simple possibility of treatment for bacterial or fungal illnesses. |
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They couldn't decide if the infection was bacterial or yeast. |
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Partly it may be due to its production of the so-called enterocins, a family of bacteriocins, which are antimicrobial peptides produced by some bacterial strains. |
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A rare condition, it is a bacterial infection that tears through the body's fascia, destroying all tissue in its path. |
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We are currently applying this technology to the isolation of new classes of anti-infectives that target the protein synthesis machinery of bacterial cells. |
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Lesprit and coworkers investigated the impact of this system by comparing the virulence of two bacterial strains in a rat model of acute pneumonia. |
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Syphilis is a bacterial infection usually transmitted by sexual contact. |
|
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In the 1950s, hand scrubbing required the use of rough brushes with stiff bristles that abraded the skin and frequently increased bacterial counts. |
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In practice, the bacterial mutation test is the most widely used and best validated bioassay for assessment of potentially mutagenic contaminants. |
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In this case, the additional identification of bacterial DNA suggests septicemia, with pathogenic bacteria presumably originating from the gastrointestinal tract. |
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The trees have been attacked by a bacterial disease known as fire blight. |
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Harvested bacterial colonies containing mutant plasmids were grown in LB medium in the presence of ampicillin and kanamycin to maintain the selective pressure on the mutants. |
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In April 1983, a 71-year-old woman with a history of rheumatic heart disease, aortic insufficiency, and bacterial endocarditis was referred for diffuse lymphadenopathy. |
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There can consequently be rapid changes in the bacterial community to maintain efficient processing of energy sources, and hence stable biogeochemical cycles. |
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Children with signs of epiglottitis, bacterial tracheitis, foreign body, chronic pulmonary disease, recent varicella, and recent steroid treatment were excluded. |
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Remove and burn all leaves that show signs of rust or bacterial leaf spot. |
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Chronic wounds, such as pressure ulcers, can sustain bacterial balance and resist infection if well cared for and kept free of necrotic avascular tissue. |
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Transgenic yellow poplar plants overexpressing the bacterial gene encoding mercuric reductase were developed for the phytoremediation of mercury pollution. |
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Avirulent bacterial strains can, in principle, also cause infections. |
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For several bacterial diseases, such as diphtheria and tetanus, physicians can prevent the illness by immunizing people against the microbes' toxins. |
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But closer study at the nearby University of Alaska revealed an assortment of bacterial cells, many of which came to life as soon as the ice thawed. |
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Even refrigerated foods can have bacterial growth, so examine bottles and packages carefully, especially those that have been in the refrigerator for several days or weeks. |
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They are blamed with spreading bacterial wilt and cucumber mosaic. |
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Because bacterial meningitis is most likely to occur in confined settings such as college dorms, some colleges ask that incoming students be vaccinated against meningococcus. |
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Resistant varieties that were also winter hardy were released in the 1940s. Grimm is still produced in Canada, where bacterial wilt is not a problem. |
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Derived from inactivated whole-cell bacterial suspension of Bordetella pertussis. |
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First, any international traveler knows that many pathogenic microbes, both viral and bacterial, have distinct biogeographies. |
|
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Any remaining sputum fraction was cryobanked for future metagenomic studies to examine bacterial colonisation of the airways. |
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Photosynthesis was established some billion years ago by ancient bacterial precursors of modern cyanobacteria. |
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Plasmids are small circles of extragenomic DNA that exists and replicates independently from the bacterial chromosome. |
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Doctors determined that the cause of the itchy rash was fungal rather than bacterial. |
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Animals injected, as described above, may be rendered hypersusceptible to all bacterial proteins. |
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A survey of vaccines in 1900 found wide variations in bacterial contamination. |
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Allowing a wine to undergo malo also protects it from bacterial contamination later. |
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The intercropping system altered bacterial community structures in the rhizosphere as opposed to that in monocultured crops. |
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Since the discovery of penicillin in 1928, antibiotics have been used to fight bacterial diseases. |
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In 1940, they showed that penicillin effectively cured bacterial infection in mice. |
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Testing the nasal secretions from a patient with a heavy cold, he found that nasal mucus had an inhibitory effect on bacterial growth. |
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Extracellular DNA acts as a functional extracellular matrix component in the biofilms of several bacterial species. |
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However, the DNA in a bacterial cell is a single circular molecule and there is no separate nuclear compartment. |
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Research suggests that the Australian seaweed Delisea pulchra may interfere with bacterial colonization. |
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In microbiology, genes can move freely even between distantly related bacteria, possibly extending to the whole bacterial domain. |
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Because of its extremely small grain size, oolitic sand has a lot of surface area, which promotes high bacterial growth. |
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Depuration of oysters can remove moderate levels of contamination of most bacterial indicators and pathogens. |
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After such organisms die, the bacterial degradation of their biomass consumes the oxygen in the water, thereby creating the state of hypoxia. |
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Normally, such material eventually decays by oxidation or bacterial activity. |
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As the skin on the back is usually folded, this provides a microclimate for bacterial propagation around the glands. |
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This is used while preening and helps in plumage maintenance by reducing bacterial degradation of feathers by feather bacilii. |
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The commonly recorded bacterial pathogens of the house sparrow are often those common in humans, and include Salmonella and Escherichia coli. |
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Apple trees are susceptible to a number of fungal and bacterial diseases and insect pests. |
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The hydrochemical environment shifts from oxygenated to anoxic, as bacterial decomposition of sunken biomass utilizes all of the free oxygen. |
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A molecular biological test was used for identification of the five periodontogenic bacterial species. |
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It has been shown that larvae with higher amounts of iridoid glycosides have better defense against parasitoids and bacterial pathogens. |
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Seven overnight passages with pexiganan caused MIC increase in 6 of 7 bacterial species tested. |
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Thus, they could be suitable for the phagotyping of this bacterial species. |
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Refrigeration does not assure the safety of garlic kept in oil, requiring use within one month to avoid bacterial spoilage. |
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The Gram stain identifies the bacterial groups Firmicutes and Actinobacteria, both of which contain many significant human pathogens. |
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Respiratory complications tend to develop on about the eighth day of the illness and can be either viral or bacterial in origin. |
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Secondary bacterial infection of the skin is a relatively uncommon complication of smallpox. |
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Viral and bacterial diseases that kill victims before the illnesses spread to others tend to flare up and then die out. |
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Spanish physician Jaume Ferran i Clua developed a cholera inoculation in 1885, the first to immunize humans against a bacterial disease. |
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Through ruptured blisters, the animal is at risk from secondary bacterial infections and, in some cases, permanent disability. |
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Sera diluted to subagglutinating titer were added to 1 mL of bacterial suspension. |
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Sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol lipids have also been identified in phototrophic and a few other bacterial species. |
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Presence of bacterial DNA and bacterial peptidoglycans in joints of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and other arthritides. |
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A bactericide derived from grapefruit extract is being used in a single-use bacterial wipe which can eradicate MRSA, salmonella and listeria. |
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Or that bacterial genetic fragments somehow persisted in the brain? |
|
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Water hardness results from the solution of carbon dioxide released by bacterial action in the soil in the percolating rainwater. |
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The bacterial with mevalonate pathway include streptococcus, staphylococcus, actinomycetes, listeria, coxiella and borrelia. |
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The aetiologic agents of bacterial diarrhea in the children of the former East Central state of Nigeria. |
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Nucleic acid immunogens are designed to include the antigenic portions of the parvoviral genome which are incorporated into bacterial plasmids. |
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Coarse aggregation of the bacterial cells with a clear background was considered a positive result for the antiserum showing agglutination. |
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The composition provides an inhibition of bacterial adhesion to an apatite test plate analyzed by scanning electron microscopy. |
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Whereas 16S rDNA sequences are highly conserved, the genome of some bacterial species harbors multiple copies of the ribosomal operon. |
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For lactational infections co-amoxiclav is the drug of choice as it will cover most bacterial infections as well as anaerobes. |
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Prebiotics have been shown to increase healthy bacterial species such as lactobacilli and bifidobacteria. |
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The ability of bacterial consortium to mineralise 1,4 dioxane was studied by the respirometric experiments. |
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National charity the Meningitis Trust found more than a third of bacterial meningitis victims are left with after-effects. |
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A University of Oregon student who died on Friday most likely succumbed to bacterial meningitis, according to Lane County Public Health. |
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The initial symptoms are the same as bacterial meningitis, its more dangerous counterpart which can kill in under four hours. |
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Determination of the etiology of bacterial meningitis and estimating cost of disease are important in guiding vaccination policies. |
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Seven different bacterial strains were isolated and identified from Kemp's ridleys and three strains from loggerheads. |
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Listeriosis is a bacterial zoonotic infection caused by Listeria monocytogenes. |
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Further examination showed that the bikini wax may have led to a serious bacterial infection and hepatitis. |
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The test uses ATP bioluminescence to identify proven bacterial indicators for caries. |
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Unlike HIV-AIDS, this bacterial infection called lymphogranuloma venereum is easily treatable with antibiotics. |
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Ssali has formulated successful treatments for many ailments, including a bacterial infection of the throat and lungs called scleroma. |
|
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A secondary goal was to determine whether bacterial abundance differed between scute centers and sulci. |
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Wounds which, whatever their seat, are complicated with aerian or bacterial emphysema, and the gases from which are infiltrated to the scrotum. |
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Blepharitis is caused by a bacterial infection of the eyelash follicles and the tiny oil-secreting meibomian glands that line the eyelids. |
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Chlamydia is the most common bacterial sexually transmitted infection and around one in 10 young people test positive. |
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Meningococcal meningitis is a bacterial form of meningitis, a serious infection of the meninges that affects the brain membrane. |
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For the time being, Gram staining and bacterial culture remain the cornerstones of bacterial meningitides diagnosis in a clinical setting. |
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The most common cause of bacterial meningitis is the bacterium Neisseria meningitides. |
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Meningococcal disease is a leading cause of bacterial meningitis and sepsis. |
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Our bodies thus contain a vast number of bacterial genes in addition to the genes in our own cells, and are collectively known as the metagenome. |
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Antibacterial activity of PHI ligands and their metal complexes was examined against three bacterial strains using agar disc diffusion method. |
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The cell imaging platform extracts bacterial cells from patient blood and micropipettes them in up to 48 cassette-held flowcell channels. |
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An increase in the concentration of calcium oxide enhanced bacterial death. |
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Isotope fractionations due to bacterial carbon fixation and C-isotope signatures in ancient sedimentary rock have been studied. |
|
But nearly half the slipped disc patients studied by the scientists tested positive for bacterial infection. |
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Of the 274 different bacterial species identified in these there were no cariogenic Streptococcus spp. |
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Conjugate vaccines are produced by linking a bacterial sugar antigen to a carrier protein. |
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Although the epidemiology of bacterial meningitis has changed, the ranking of causative organisms has not. |
|
In their study, the scientists confirmed that MurJ flips a tatty molecule from one side of a bacterial cell membrane to the other. |
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If Isla is cut and the wound is not treated swiftly, she could develop cellulitis, a dangerous bacterial skin infection that can be fatal. |
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Pig microflora contains cellulolytic and hemicellulolytic bacterial species that are also found to be highly active in the rumen. |
|
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Toll-like receptor 2 functions as a pattern recognition receptor for diverse bacterial products. |
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Glucosamine and muramic acid concentrations can be used to establish cumulative fungal and bacterial cell wall product concentrations in soil. |
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Then we classified each bacterial sample under the microscope and found several different cocci, rods, and spirochetes. |
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The antibacterial activity of YML might be attributed to its capacity to disrupt bacterial murein. |
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An urgent MRI scan or myelography is required to exclude extrinsic cord compression due to bacterial abscess, tuberculous abscess or lymphoma. |
|
Secondary bacterial infection often occurs which compounds the scarring and leads to cicatricial entropion or ectropion. |
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During coalification, peat undergoes several changes as a result of bacterial decay, compaction, heat and time. |
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The approach may be more effective in reducing the risk of bacterial infections in neutropenic patients. |
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The manual method of isolating bacterial strains from a sample is called the streak plate procedure. |
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Nitrogenase is a bacterial enzyme that is responsible for reduction of N2 to NH3 and can lead the reactions in normal pressure and temperature. |
|
Nocardiosis is an uncommon, Gram-positive bacterial infectious disease that is typically opportunistic in nature. |
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What makes the results surprising is that in animal models, antibiotics cause bacterial lysis, leading to inflammation in the subarachnoid space. |
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This study is the first to look at bacterial populations within the submucosa, where the inflammation is actually occurring, he noted. |
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First structures of an active bacterial tyrosinase reveal copper plasticity. |
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They are formed by bacterial fermentation and cause blood vessels to constrict. |
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This aspect is clearly demonstrated by turbidity and bacterial counts taken from the supernatant and the sediments at the end of the test period. |
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The researchers measured the bacterial content of some swatches within 5 minutes of being lifted from the solution. |
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The most frequently identified bacterial organisms belonged to the genus Staphylococcus followed by Corynebacterium. |
|
Disseminated MAC is a bacterial opportunistic infection that occurs in as many as 40 percent of patients with advanced HIV disease. |
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Diuresis of cirrhotic ascites increases its opsonic activity and may help prevent spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. |
|
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Enzyme, bacterial inoculant, and formic acid effects on silage composition of orchardgrass and alfalfa. |
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Oxidizing agents, such as peroxides, can destroy cells, including bacterial spores, but they work slowly. |
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In addition to bacterial assays, MX is a direct-acting mutagen and genotoxin in vivo and in mammalian cells in vitro. |
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Acute paronychia is usually the result of a bacterial infection entering the nail fold through a cut or break in the skin. |
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The sludge is then depressurised and cooled before being fed into large concrete digesters for the bacterial digestion process to start. |
|
Shigellae cause an estimated 150 million cases and 6,00,000 deaths annually, and can cause disease after ingestion of as few as 10 bacterial cells. |
|
The Platelet PGD Test has now demonstrated the ability to reliably detect a broad variety of common bacterial contaminants in buffy coat platelets. |
|
This will include the characterisation of primary cells derived from mesocolic mesentery and the characterisation of bacterial strains isolated from cystic fibrosis patients. |
|
Penicillin antibiotics were among the first medications to be effective against many bacterial infections caused by staphylococci and streptococci. |
|
Here we show that Chlamydia infection in human epithelial cells induces Golgi fragmentation to generate Golgi ministacks surrounding the bacterial inclusion. |
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Extracts from bracts stopped the bacteria responsible for these dental conditions from being able to stick to surfaces and prevented the release of some bacterial toxins. |
|
In most cases, a secondary infection, usually bacterial, is present. |
|
For instance, when Abbott and his colleagues attached a receptor called biotin to the lipids, the sensor detected a bacterial protein that binds to biotin. |
|
Browse through the TOC of global bacterial biopesticides market for an in-depth analysis of the industry trends and segments, with help of various tables and figures. |
|
He had symptoms of recurrent lower airway obstruction on a background of chronic obstructive airways disease following previous severe bacterial pneumonia and tuberculosis. |
|
In the preantibiotic era, when infectious aortitis usually resulted from bacterial endocarditis, streptococci, staphylococci, and gonococci were most commonly reported. |
|
Other severe medical conditions whose treatment is hampered in this way include tuberculosis, leprosy, epilepsy and the common severe bacterial Buruli ulcer. |
|
Against these backgrounds, this study aimed to determine the bacterial prevalence of LRTIs among children attending a tertiary hospital in Benin City, Nigeria. |
|
Further investigation showed a possible link between a component of bacterial cell membranes, a class of compounds called lipopolysaccharides, and insulin resistance. |
|
A key element responsible for heightened inflammatory response observed in periodontal disease destruction is the role of bacterial lipopolysaccharides. |
|
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The root mean square errors of the fitted model, and the plot of predicted-versus-observed bacterial loads, were measures that indicated the predictive model was a good fit. |
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The risk of severe bacterial infection is estimated, as of 2002, at about 1 in 50,000 platelet transfusions, and 1 in 500,000 red blood cell transfusions. |
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For retrievers that spend time around lakes and ponds, ask your veterinarian about Leptospira, or Lepto, which is a bacterial disease dogs can get from exposure to water. |
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Using DNA sequencing technology housed at the UO's Genomics Core Facility, scientists sequenced the bacterial 16S ribosomal RNA gene isolated from the samples. |
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Neither of these objectives have been addressed before and both have high potential to change the way in which biologists think about bacterial symbioses. |
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In heterotropic allosteric regulation, the bacterial enzymes are activated by ADP and inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate binding at the allosteric site. |
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The term rhinosinusitis is often used and acute rhinosinusitis may be classified further into acute bacterial rhinosinusitis and viral rhinosinusitis based on symptoms. |
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Vigilant One in five cases of bacterial meningitis leads to death. |
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Around 500,000 Britons have had viral or bacterial meningitis. |
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Direct and indirect mechanisms in the bacterial leaching of covellite. |
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Just a few decades ago, a pediatrician getting a frantic phone call from a parent whose child was running a high fever would immediately consider bacterial meningitis. |
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In most cases bacterial meningitis occurs between October to March. |
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Metabolism of pentachlorophenol by an axenic bacterial culture. |
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Lactobacilli dominated the bacterial probiotics market share. |
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Most papers reported predominantly gram-positive bacterial flora and, as in poultry, most frequently, various species of lactobacilli and gram-positive cocci. |
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They used a class of proteins known as recombinases, which can record information into bacterial DNA by recognizing specific DNA addresses and inverting their direction. |
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An Agrobacterium tumefaciens bacterial host containing the plasmid construct can then be used to insert the desired sequence into the plant genome. |
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The anthranoid compounds of Cascara are carried unabsorbed to the large intestine where the active aglycon is released by bacterial hydrolysis of the sugar. |
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In this child, the presence of localized tender inguinal adenitis in the absence of an eschar, prompted us to treat the condition as bacterial adenitis. |
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Haystacks produce internal heat due to bacterial fermentation. |
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