What's the difference between antiluetic and lues?
Antiluetic
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) Amoxicillin, a synthetic penicillin preparation, was given to 25 cases as an antiluetic.
Lues
Definition:
(n.) Disease, especially of a contagious kind.
Example Sentences:
(1) Lue-M3 is mainly a monocyte marker, and retinoids thus seem to induce a shift from monocytoid to myeloid differentiation.
(2) Differential diagnosis includes tulareaemia, cat scratch syndrome, lues, and foreign body reaction.
(3) Also, the average value was higher in the lues-seropositive group than that in the lues-seronegative group.
(4) About the cases of treated lues at different stages, in 23 samples with VDRL negative has been found no positivity at three tests used, while in 49 samples with VDRL positive 8 are resulted positive at 19S IgM FTA-ABS.
(5) In addition to the usual periosteal and metaphyseal bone lesions of lues, areas of focal lucencies and sequestra were present.
(6) Two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples--from 347 patients with various psychiatric and neurological disorders--and subsequent silver staining revealed two additional polypeptides (Mr 40,000) in 49% of 111 schizophrenics, 46% of 43 schizoaffective patients, 36% of 41 patients with affective disorders, 43% of 28 patients with multiple sclerosis, but not in 25 patients without neurological symptomatology, nor in 9 patients with Lues, and in only 2 of 25 patients with AIDS.
(7) A protocol of search and eventual control of these pathologies has been developed, in which lues, HBV and HIV infections received particular attention.
(8) The test can be a precious diagnostic tool since, beside allowing to decide the recovery from the disease from an immunological point, finds further applications in the connatal and neurological lues.
(9) Moreover, visual acuity is much better correlated with CS than with LUE.
(10) These findings have been rarely reported in early congenital lues.
(11) Abnormalities demonstrated on upper-gastrointestinal series and a positive FTA-ABS suggested gastric lues.
(12) The result of the investigation, performed on 58 patients, demonstrated a high incidence of serum positivity with respect to lues and HBV markers (the later infection seems to be due both to the sexual behaviour and to narcotic addiction).
(13) There seems to be a pattern of progression of ALS signs and symptoms based on area of onset with LLE involvement tending to follow RLE weakness, LUE weakness following RUE onset, and RUE involvement following next in patients whose onset is bulbar.
(14) c) The serological identification of the antibodies present in luetic sera, obtained by associating selected treponemal and non-treponemal tests (VDRL, FTA-5, FTA-ABS, CF-ATPS) enables us to correlate the serological data with the main biological phases of lues, even during the periods of clinical latency of the disease.
(15) The Lues tests were negative during pregnancy but a displacental transfer of pathogenic agents could be assumed.
(16) The antibody titer in serum to Streptococcus pyogenes L-form and Staphylococcus aureus L-form were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in 28 patients with Behçet's disease, 31 patients with other uveitis (sarcoidosis: 10, Harada's disease: 5, tuberculosis: 4, rheumatoid arthritis: 4, lues: 2, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis: 2, herpes simplex: 2, trauma: 2) and 16 healthy normal controls.
(17) These are: congenital changes, trauma, metabolic neuropathies, Meniere's disease, noise-induced hearing loss, lues, sudden hearing loss, and unilateral symptoms of undetermined etiology.
(18) The specimens were obtained from a 63-year-old white male with acquired lues.
(19) To identify the characteristic features of lues in patients infected with HIV, 402 HIV-positive patients were examined for serological and clinical signs of lues.
(20) The authors' experience shows that the following examinations are useful in the diagnosis of acute unilateral sensorineural hearing loss: the recording of acoustically evoked brainstem potentials, an otoneurological examination, a neurological examination to detect a possible centrally located reason for the hearing loss, serological examinations for lues, toxoplasmosis, Borrelia, and the virus KBR if there is any suspicion of a previous virus infection.