GE Mathisen, JP Johnson - Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1997 - jstor.org Glenn E. Mathisen and J. Patrick Johnson ... From the Infectious Disease Service, UCLA-Olive
View Medical Center, Sylmar, and the UCLA Neurosurgery Service, UCLA Center for Health
Sciences, Los Angeles, California ... Before the late 1800s, brain abscess was an almost ... Cited by 240 - Related articles - All 3 versions
RW Bradsher, SW Chapman, PG Pappas - Infectious disease clinics of North …, 2003 - Elsevier Blastomycosis is one of the endemic mycoses in the central United States, caused by a dimorphic
fungus, Blastomyces dermatitidis, that exists in nature in mycelial phase and converts to yeast
phase at body temperature. The organism may produce epidemics of infection following a ... Cited by 156 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions
- ►georgetown.edu [PDF] SW Chapman, RW Bradsher, Jr, GD … - Clinical Infectious …, 2000 - UChicago Press Featured in Reuters-USE_THIS "Dual HIV/TB infection common in S. African infants" December
29, 2008 # High Incidence of Tuberculosis among HIV-Infected Infants: Evidence from a South
African Population-Based Study Highlights the Need for Improved Tuberculosis Control ... Cited by 123 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 18 versions
RW Bradsher - Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1996 - jstor.org Histoplasmosis and blastomycosis are caused by dimorphic fungi, can be epidemic or
endemic, and can produce a spectrum of illness, from subclinical infection to progressive disseminated
disease. Diagnosis of both is best made by visualization of yeast in tissue or by culture. ... Cited by 121 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 3 versions
JE Kaplan, H Masur, KK Holmes, CM Wilfert, R … - Clinical infectious …, 1995 - jstor.org The USPHS/IDSA Prevention of Opportunistic Infections Working Group has recently formulated
disease-specific rec- ommendations for 17 opportunistic infections (OIs) or groups of OIs in
HIV-infected persons [1]. The purpose of this article is to synthesize these ... Cited by 101 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 8 versions
- ►nih.gov [PDF] J Wheat - Clinical microbiology reviews, 1995 - cmr.highwire.org Certain mycoses are common and major causes of morbidity in patients with AIDS who have
lived in the areas where these mycoses are endemic. The incidence and severity of these mycoses
increase with progression of human immunodefi- ciency virus (HIV) infection and ... Cited by 100 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 7 versions
- ►nih.gov [PDF] O Lortholary, B Dupont - Clinical Microbiology Reviews, 1997 - cmr.highwire.org INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................................
...............478 General Comments ............................................. ... ... * Corresponding author. Mailing
address: Service des Maladies In- fectieuses et Tropicales, Hôpital de l'Institut Pasteur, ... Cited by 95 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions
NM Ampel - Emerg Infect Dis, 1996 - cdc.gov Emerging Disease Issues and Fungal Pathogens Associated with HIV Infection Neil M.
Ampel, MD University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson Veterans Affairs Medical
Center, Tucson, Arizona, USA Fungal diseases are increasing among patients infected ... Cited by 89 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 15 versions
GY Minamoto, AS Rosenberg - Medical clinics of North America, 1997 - Elsevier Fungal infections have increasingly become major causes of morbidity and mortality in patients
with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Initially in the acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (AIDS) epidemic, the opportunistic fungi Cryptococcus and Candida were the ... Cited by 76 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 8 versions