(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.
Biologist
Definition:
(n.) A student of biology; one versed in the science of biology.
Example Sentences:
(1) For evolutionary biologists population variability per se has proven of interest.
(2) Hence, autoantibodies are useful tools for the molecular biologist as well as the clinician.
(3) The cultured cells were characterized for growth rate and growth potential, morphology by light and electron microscopy, presence of esterases and cytokeratins, and sensitivity to storage at 4 degrees C. Cultured mammary epithelial cells from milk may be useful to dairy scientists and mammary gland biologists.
(4) The work of epidemiologists and biologists results in no less heterogeneous results.
(5) A desirable terminology, therefore, is one that is familiar to molecular biologists and can facilitate comparisons with other systems--immune, endocrine, nervous--where similar methods and terms are in use.
(6) The recent advances in the kinetics of the reactions of muscle proteins have increased still further the need for understanding among muscle physiologists-and other biologists-of those parts of thermodynamics that concern them directly, notably those relating work and chemical change.
(7) Domain-specific antibodies have already increased the molecular resolution with which cell biologists can immunologically examine the function of cellular proteins.
(8) When the eminent biologist TH Huxley met Gladstone for the first time in 1877, in the company of Darwin , he exclaimed afterwards: “Why, put him in the middle of a moor, with nothing in the world but his shirt, and you could not prevent him being anything he liked.” This is my view of Cicero: drop him into Westminster or Washington or any other political culture and he would instantly begin clambering to the top.
(9) Finally the authors report the necessity of strict collaboration systems between clinical experts, geneticists, biologists and informaticians.
(10) This disease has challenged cell biologists, it has served as a basis for intense scientific inquiry, and it has defied the therapeutic attempts of pediatric oncologists.
(11) Stephen Curry , a structural biologist at Imperial College London, says that scientists need to come to a new arrangement with publishers fit for the online age and that "for a long time, we've been taken for a ride and it's got ridiculous".
(12) Three British biologists have discovered that in the "bacteriophage phi X 174 genes D and E are translated from the same DNA sequence but in different reading frames."
(13) Some diseases, notably AIDS, are a much greater challenge and it will need all the expertise of molecular biologists and immunologists to devise a vaccine which may control the disease.
(14) The recent discovery of hypervariable VNTR (variable number of tandem repeat) loci has led to much excitement among population biologists regarding the feasibility of deriving individual estimates of relatedness in field populations by DNA fingerprinting.
(15) The traditional definition of the fibroblast based solely on morphological criteria, which has satisfied most biologists for years, now needs reappraisal.
(16) Among the "non invasive methods" available for biologists, salivary determinations seem of interest, particularly in endocrinology and clinical pharmacology.
(17) To this end, a 'polymorphic programming environment' has been developed which represents both an expert system and a high-level language for theoretical chemists and molecular biologists.
(18) During the last 25 years, cutaneous biologists have been particularly interested in abnormal cutaneous vascular patterns, the profusion of capillary anastomoses, the leakiness of venules, clotting, fibrinolysis, and blood viscosity.
(19) The biologist may prefer to use plasma rather than serum to facilitate sampling procedures in his laboratory.
(20) Rapid advances in site-directed mutagenesis and total gene synthesis combined with new expression systems in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells have provided the molecular biologist with tools for modification of existing proteins to improve catalytic activity, stability and selectivity, for construction of chimeric molecules and for synthesis of completely novel molecules that may be endowed with some useful activity.