Infection Control in Multidose Inhalers
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University Of Leicester Scientist's Discovery Opens New Avenues For Treatment Of Poorly Controlled Asthma
medicalnewstoday.com — “A new study at the university of leicester is probing why asthma relief inhalers might actually make asthma worse- and what can be done about it. research led by professor peter braddin” View full resource at medicalnewstoday.com
Most Recently Shared on January 13, 2010 at 5:10 pm By:
University Of Leicester Scientist's Discovery Opens New Avenues For Treatment Of Poorly Controlled Asthma http://mnt.to/3wdG
When Anthrax Isnt Anthrax
infectioncontroltoday.com — “A patient who had symptoms of inhalation anthrax infection and who eventually succumbed to the disease was actually infected by a different bacterial species that had acquired anthrax toxin genes. Within a matter of days, pathologists at The Methodist Hospital and scientists from two other institutions sequenced and analyzed the pathogen's genome, and determined it was not likely to be a bioterrorism weapon. In an upcoming issue of the Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, lead investigat” View full resource at infectioncontroltoday.com
Most Recently Shared on August 24, 2011 at 9:57 am By:
When Anthrax Isn't Anthrax - Infection Control Today: When Anthrax Isn't AnthraxInfection Control TodayA strain ... http://t.co/QrvvGcH
CBRNE - Q Fever: eMedicine Emergency Medicine
emedicine.medscape.com — “Overview: First described in Australia in 1935, Q fever is a rickettsial disease with acute and chronic stages. Q fever differs from other rickettsial diseases in that it is caused by inhalation of infected particles, not by ...” View full resource at emedicine.medscape.com
Most Recently Shared on May 5, 2010 at 5:27 pm By:
First described in Australia in 1935, Q fever is a rickettsial disease with acute and chronic stages. Learn more. http://bit.ly/aPd4LZ
Diabetes and Tuberculosis - Risk of Tuberculosis with Diabetes - Diabetes and Risk of TB
diabetes.about.com — “What can you do, as a person with diabetes, to protect yourself from a disease like tuberculosis? Keep good control of your blood sugar levels. The risk of tuberculosis goes up when hyperglycemia is uncontrolled. Because tuberculosis is an airborne disease it is difficult to protect yourself from it. If an infected person coughs, sneezes or otherwise expels respiratory secretions into the air, it places others at risk for inhaling the droplets and contacting the disease.” View full resource at diabetes.about.com
Most Recently Shared on November 3, 2010 at 4:21 pm By:
Diabetes Raises Risk for TB: What can you do, as a person with diabetes, to protect yourself from a disease like t... http://bit.ly/d8kmh3
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MNT Asthma News
The latest asthma and respiratory news published daily. Articles from research centers, universities and prestigious journals.
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Infectious Disease
Organizing infectious disease resources shared by health experts, advocates, and organizations into WisdomCards.
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Julie Bohlen
Health content professional with MBA in heathcare management. Sharing quality health resources and news. On executive team at OrganizedWisdom.
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