(1) As assistant bacteriologist and ex-POW he joined the British regimental hospital in Bangkok.
(2) A successful challenge against infective hospitalism is only possible under the supervision of the bacteriologist.
(3) The conventional reluctance of bacteriologists to accept evidence obtained from RCMB cultures seeded directly in the ward or at operation is challenged.
(4) The bacteriologist and the clinician are thus suitably armed when creating a rational antibiotic therapy.
(5) The diagnosis must be confirmed by both the pathologist and the bacteriologist.
(6) If and when they become available, they may be recommended for: (1) Screening asymptomatic men and women, (2) Use as an adjunct diagnostic tool in cases of prostatitis, arthritis, disseminated gonococcal infection, and pelvic inflammatory disease, (3) Use (alone or in conjunction with culture) when specimens must be mailed to a central laboratory, when mailing conditions do not allow for incubation within 24-48 hr, or when proper media and qualified bacteriologists are not available.
(7) Successful early diagnosis and management of opportunistic infections ia a challenge for the clinician, bacteriologist and pathologist, and requires these close collaboration.
(8) An in vitro model is described which enables the bacteriologist to design an effective combination of drugs and to measure its efficiency under simulated in vivo conditions.
(9) Most hospital bacteriologists have divided staphylococci into two groups: Staphylococcus aureus and the coagulase-negative staphylococci of which the novobiocin-resistant varieties are termed S. saprophyticus.
(10) This rate attained 99% when each slide was examined for 30-60 min by a qualified bacteriologist.
(11) The data confirm the earlier conclusion that a majority of planktonic bacteria are new species previously unrecognized by bacteriologists.
(12) Results of three quality control trials of antibiotic sensitivity testing carried out on staphylococci by the Birmingham Regional Bacteriologists Group are presented.
(13) Over the years, immunogeneticists, geneticists, epidemiologists, bacteriologists, membrane biologists, and clinicians have joined in the attempt to clarify our understanding of ankylosing spondylitis, Reiter's disease, psoriatic arthropathy, and other interrelated conditions.
(14) Surgeon John Thomson (1847-1909), a Scot who made his life's work in Queensland, was a pioneer surgeon, radiologist and bacteriologist, and one of the founders of the St John Ambulance movement in Australia and the Railway Ambulance Corps.
(15) The Ba(OH)2 indicator system was demonstrated to be a practical procedure in assisting clinical bacteriologists in the accurate and rapid identification of the pathogenic Neisseria from clinical specimens.
(16) There always has to exist a good cooperation between the bacteriologist, the clinical doctors, the nurses and the technical staff.
(17) This paper reviews Wright's life as an ophthalmologist and ophthalmic bacteriologist and pathologist in British India, and his role in the evolution of facial nerve akinesia.
(18) Investigations of the family are included together with a discussion of the implications for the diagnostic bacteriologist.
(19) This microorganism can be easily detected by bacteriologists by the use of special media and such infection is suggested clinically by urinary tract infection with "sterile", strongly alkaline urine.
(20) In the case of direct susceptibility testing by the Sensicult dipslide method, however, the results obtained by personnel at the surgeries and by trained bacteriologists displayed unacceptable disparities, despite the fact that a continuously running training programme was established.
Bacteriology
Definition:
(n.) The science relating to bacteria.
Example Sentences:
(1) Caries-related bacteriological and biochemical factors were studied in 12 persons with low and 11 persons with normal salivary-secretion rates before and after a four-week period of frequent mouthrinses with 10% sorbitol solution (adaptation period).
(2) Neither environmental nor bacteriological factors seemed to be involved in the etiology of the disease.
(3) Presumable this medium was modified repeatedly after its introduction in bacteriology in 1918 by Gassner.
(4) Nine of the children had at least one positive Limulus assay, and eight of this group had bacteriologic cultures indicative of gram-negative infection.
(5) The qualification for carrying on the isonicotinic acid hydrazide monotherapy in the tuberculosis cutis luposa and verrucosa is proved on the basis of bacteriological, pathologo-anatomical and clinical peculiarities of these forms of tuberculosis of the skin.
(6) Bacteriologic culturing of fecal samples from 28 clinically normal horses yielded only 2 salmonella isolations, S manhattan in each case.
(7) Five ml aliquots of ORS were collected at 6, 12 and 24 hours after reconstitution for bacteriologic study.
(8) Salmonella typhi O and H antibody titres were determined by the Standard Agglutination Test (SAT) in 85 patients with bacteriologically proven typhoid, 102 patients with non-typhoidal febrile illnesses (control group 1), and 170 healthy subjects (control group 2).
(9) The following results were obtained during pharmacokinetic, bacteriological and clinical evaluation of the usefulness of the combination (1:1) of imipenem (MK-0787) and cilastatin sodium (MK-0791), an inhibitor of dehydropeptidase-I, in the treatment of patients with obstetric and gynecologic infections.
(10) Bacteriologically, successful eradication of causative organisms was confirmed in all the 4 children who underwent the test.
(11) Lyophilized Histoplasma capsulatum, Coccidioides immitis, Blastomyces dermatitidis and Aspergillus fumigatus are rehydrated, evenly dispersed, and made into smears using a bacteriological loop and alcohol-cleaned slides.
(12) Recent developments in the fields of molecular biology, virology, bacteriology and immunology offer new opportunities for the development and improvement of vaccines.
(13) This higher-than-expected rate of positive cultures was probably related to the meticulous bacteriologic techniques used.
(14) Quality and efficiency are bacteriologically controlled.
(15) Bacteriological and serological analysis may be of success and complete the pathologic-anatomical diagnoses.
(16) An in vitro experiment was conduced under bacteriologically controlled conditions to examine the effect of light on the production of pectin methyl esterase (PME) and pectin polygalacturonase (PG) in the root exudates of Trifolium alexandrinum inoculated with an efficient strain of Rhizobium trifolii.
(17) Analysis of the clinical features, the operative, bacteriological and haematological findings is made and discussed in detail.
(18) Routine bacteriological surveillance, however, might permit their use on a rotational basis.
(19) 72 newly admitted patients of three surgical intensive care units of the Medical School Hannover were examined bacteriologically for pseudomonas aeruginosa for a period of 7 months.
(20) The results of the bacteriological examination of the body surface of A. lumbricoides yielded many genera of bacterial organisms.