Article citationsMore>>
Baggett, H.C., Peruski, L.F., Olsen, S.J., Thamthitiwat, S., Rhodes, J., Dejsirilert, S., Wongjindanon, W., Dowell, S.F., Fischer, J.E., Areerat, P., Sornkij, D., Jorakate, P., Kaewpan, A., Prapasiri, P., Naorat, S., Sangsuk, L., Eampokalap, B., Moore, M.R., Carvalho, G., Beall, B., Ungchusak, K. and Maloney, S.A. (2009) Incidence of Pneumococcal Bacteremia Requiring Hospitalization in Rural Thailand. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 48, S65-S74.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/596484
has been cited by the following article:
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TITLE:
Insights into Pneumococcal Pathogenesis and Antibiotic Resistance
AUTHORS:
Eric S. Donkor, Ebenezer V. Badoe
KEYWORDS:
Pneumococcus, Antibiotic Resistance, Virulence, Penicillin, Genome
JOURNAL NAME:
Advances in Microbiology,
Vol.4 No.10,
August
18,
2014
ABSTRACT:
Since
its discovery in 1891, the pneumococcus has been one of the most extensively studied
microbes, and was involved in several historical findings such as the discovery
of genetic material that was later shown to be DNA. The pneumococcus is part of the normal bacterial flora of the nasopharynx,
but can on occasions progress to sterile sites of the body and cause invasive diseases.
There are about one million new invasive pneumococcal infections every year, majority
of which occur in the developing world where children
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