Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Howard E. Pitchon"'
Autor:
Maria T. Abreu-Martin, William S Mow, Konstantinos A. Papadakis, Eric A. Vasiliauskas, Howard E. Pitchon, Stephan R. Targan
Publikováno v:
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology. 2:309-313
Reports of tuberculosis (TB) in patients administered infliximab prompted the Food and Drug Administration to recommend that all patients being considered for this therapy be evaluated for the risk for latent TB infection by means of a tuberculin ski
Publikováno v:
Clinical Infectious Diseases. 18:921-924
A 35-year-old homosexual man who had a remote history of cocaine abuse presented to the hospital with fever, chills, drenching night sweats, and progressive dyspnea of 3 months' duration. His condition had been diagnosed as AIDS 1 1/2 years before pr
Autor:
John T. Yamashita, Cyril R. Gaultier, Peter R. Wolfe, Richard D. Meyer, Reza Babapour, Howard E. Pitchon
Publikováno v:
Medicine. 73:69-78
We report here 3 cases of aspergillus sinusitis in patients with AIDS and the 1st fully described case, to our knowledge, of sinusitis associated with Pseudallescheria boydii in a patient with AIDS. We review the microbiology and pathology of fungal
Autor:
Howard E. Pitchon, Ann E. Walts
Publikováno v:
Diagnostic cytopathology. 7(6)
We report the diagnosis of Pneumocystis carinii (PC) in a fine-needle aspirate (FNA) from the thyroid of a human immunodeficiency virus infected (HIV+) male receiving aerosolized pentamidine as prophylaxis for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP). Th
Publikováno v:
Annals of Internal Medicine. 85:475
Excerpt A number of serious adverse effects have been reported in association with diphenylhydantoin (Dilantin®) therapy ( 1 ), including hepatitis, pancytopenia, and purpura fulminans. Although mo...
Autor:
Howard E. Pitchon, Lucien B. Guze, Thomas T. Yoshikawa, Robert W. Hall, Arnold S. Bayer, William P. Mayer
Publikováno v:
Archives of Internal Medicine. 136:1173
Two heroin addicts, husband and wife, who shared injection paraphernalia extensively, developed enterococcal docarditis within six weeks of one another. The etiologic organisms were of the same subspecies and had identical antibiotic susceptibilities