It is likely that without ongoing antibiotic suppression, reinfection will occur. |
|
I have been drinking cranberry juice, but I cannot seem to break the cycle of reinfection. |
|
The researchers concluded that the first infection protected them from reinfection. |
|
Using DNA fingerprinting as the gold standard, our study supports reinfection as a mechanism leading to changing drug-susceptibility patterns. |
|
If the pathogen causing reinfection is different from the original pathogen, two weeks of treatment are sufficient. |
|
These studies have demonstrated that reinfection, before or during therapy, can be a mechanism leading to the development of drug resistance. |
|
The wire flooring of their brooder cages prevented immediate reinfection via fecal consumption. |
|
Makes the difference between reinfection and recrudescence, by the identification of parasite markers. |
|
Immediate prognosis is good, but the likelihood of reinfection constitutes a major health problem. |
|
Successive production of uredinia and reinfection throughout the summer result in high levels of infection on the alternate host. |
|
The air, rain and insect borne disease spread easily and the rain helped wash the bacteria into the flower for reinfection. |
|
A special measure is necessary to prevent continuing reinfection of neighbouring Member States from Kaliningrad. |
|
Infection and reinfection patterns of schistosomiasis generally show a peak in children followed by a strong decline in adults. |
|
When can livestock be reintroduced on the land without fear of reinfection? |
|
If laboratory cross-contamination or administrative errors occur, this would lead to an overestimate of the proportion of recurrences attributed to reinfection. |
|
Most patients with uncomplicated infections respond well to therapy and don't suffer reinfection. |
|
Because of reinfection, however, the effect is relatively brief in communities where TB is endemic. |
|
If you have several birds, treat all of them at the same time and repeat this treatment to prevent reinfection. |
|
Female physiology, along with women's inability to access health care and treatment, make women more susceptible to reinfection than men. |
|
Daily reinfection is needed or the disease goes dormant like algebra. |
|
|
The source of reinfection was wild poliovirus originating from Nigeria. |
|
Persons who recover from an infection caused by one serotype of poliovirus are permanently immune to reinfection by that serotype but not to infection by the others. |
|
Subsequent efforts to eradicate the disease failed, despite the arrival in the 1980s of Praziquantel, a drug scientists say is highly effective in controlling the disease but fails to prevent reinfection. |
|
Consequently, even though infection with a particular agent does protect against reinfection by that same pathogen, it does not confer protection from other pathogens that have not been encountered. |
|
Infection with one type though it confers lifetime immunity from reinfection with that type of dengue does not prevent an individual from being infected by the other three types. |
|
Those who test HIV-positive should receive available treatment and care, and prevention counselling to protect others from infection and themselves from reinfection. |
|
Plants of Rubus from countries where BRLV occurs should come from a reliable certification scheme, in which particular attention has been paid to preventing pollentransmitted reinfection. |
|
Production of healthy budwood is the only practical means of control, but it must be accompanied by suitable siting of orchards to avoid reinfection as far as possible during the first years of development. |
|
These additives are more stable and longer lasting than those produced by chlorination, and therefore provide outstanding extended protection against bacterial reinfection. |
|
An inexpensive and effective drug, praziquantel, exists but the risk of reinfection following treatment is high and calls for long-term annual retreatment. |
|
Some believe that deworming is not a satisfactory solution because it must be repeated in the absence of improved sanitation, hygiene and health education, and reinfection occurs frequently. |
|
There was no indication that cytokine levels, proliferation or levels of circulating white blood cells were predictive of reinfection intensities. |
|
In addition, the media conveyed key facts about polio and discussed the consequences of not completing all vaccines, as well as details about the reinfection of the country with the wild poliovirus. |
|
According to the social epidemiological study, fungal infection is a disease featuring relatively high incidence and reinfection rate. |
|
Officials also worry countries torn by conflict, such as Ukraine, Sudan and the Central African Republic, are rife for polio reinfection. |
|
They collected data regarding microbiologic and clinical cure, rates of relapse, reinfection, bacterernia, and adverse events. |
|
Here we report a case of apparent VZV reinfection with recurrent varicella infection in a nurse in a teaching general hospital in Taiwan. |
|
Because they were resistant to reinfection, they are able to care for individuals who caught the disease for the first time, including the next generation of children. |
|
In endemic areas, the majority of infected persons do not develop clinical symptoms and past infection leads to robust immunity against reinfection. |
|
Although the country was declared free from the disease last year, there is still the real risk of reinfection from the high number of cases found in nearby Pakistan. |
|
|
Reinfection refers to elimination of the organism, followed by its return, and superinfection refers to the appearance of a new organism in the culture. |
|
Reinfection with a second strain makes the ill person vulnerable to dengue haemorrhagic fever as well. |
|