Zobrazeno 1 - 5
of 5
pro vyhledávání: '"J G, Hackell"'
Autor:
Andrés, de Roux, B, Schmöle-Thoma, B, Schmöele-Thoma, G R, Siber, J G, Hackell, A, Kuhnke, N, Ahlers, S A, Baker, A, Razmpour, E A, Emini, P D, Fernsten, W C, Gruber, S, Lockhart, O, Burkhardt, T, Welte, H M, Lode
Publikováno v:
Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. 46(7)
Background. High functional antibody responses, establishment of immunologic memory, and unambiguous efficacy in infants suggest that an initial dose of conjugated pneumococcal polysaccharide (PnC) vaccine may be of value in a comprehensive adult imm
Autor:
S B, Black, H R, Shinefield, P, Ray, E M, Lewis, B, Fireman, R, Hiatt, D V, Madore, C L, Johnson, J G, Hackell
Publikováno v:
The Pediatric infectious disease journal. 12(12)
The safety of the combined oligosaccharide conjugate Haemophilus influenzae (Hib) type b (HbOC) and whole cell diphtheria-tetanus toxoids-pertussis (DTP) vaccine (Tetramune, HbOC-DTP; Lederle) in infancy was evaluated in 6644 recipients of this vacci
Autor:
M. GLODE, L. JOFFE, K. REISINGER, M. BLATTER, S. PLOTKIN, B. WATSON, L. GROSSMAN, B. ASMAR, M. BERRY, S. STAROBIN, G. FISCH, J. G. HACKELL, B. SHEIP, B. MCKEE
Publikováno v:
The Pediatric infectious disease journal. 11(7)
A double-blind, randomized, controlled trial comparing 4 lots of acellular pertussis-diphtheria tetanus toxoids vaccine (APDT) to whole cell DTP vaccine in 397 children was conducted at 7 clinical centers. Children were immunized at 17 to 24 months o
Publikováno v:
Developments in biological standardization. 73
The results of the following studies are reported: a longitudinal double blind trial comparing Lederle-Takeda APDT vaccine with Lederle DTP vaccine in two, four and six month old infants; two double blind similar APDT vs DTP trials in 18 month old an
Neonatal sepsis at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, 1969-1975: bacterial isolates and clinical correlates
Publikováno v:
The Johns Hopkins medical journal. 140(2)
The experience with neonatal sepsis at The Johns Hopkins Hospital during 1969-1975 was reviewed. Major pathogens included Escherichia coli, group B streptococcus, other streptococci, and Klebsiella. Nineteen percent of coliform isolates were kanamyci