10 research outputs found

    Quinapril Prevents Restenosis After Coronary Stenting in Patients With Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme D Allele.

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    Fungal biofilms in human disease

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    Fungal biofilms are an important clinical problem. A number of factors including the increasing use of indwelling medical devices wider prescription of broad spectrum antibiotics and an aging and more immuno-compromised patient population has combined to create an opportunity for yeasts and moulds to cause infection. It is also becoming increasingly clear that for a number of serious infections the development of a fungal biofilm is important in the pathophysiology of the infection.<p></p> This chapter will discuss the importance of fungal biofilms in different anatomical areas, will try to provide insights into how fungal biofilm infection should be diagnosed and treated and provide an explanation as to why biofilms may be difficult to treat effectively with routine antifungal regimens.<p></p> Finally it will discuss how our current level of knowledge of the development and biology of fungal biofilms may, in future, lead to a wider choice of therapeutic interventions.<p></p&gt

    Understanding the mechanisms of soil water repellency from nanoscale to ecosystem scale: a review

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    Castleman’s Disease: A Unicentric Case of Abdominal Origin and Literature Review

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    Interventional Cardiology: A Comprehensive Bibliography

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    Ocular Toxicity of Targeted Anticancer Agents

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