Correlation between the genetic diversity of nosocomial pathogens and their survival time in intensive care units.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Martin Schumacher,et al. How many infections are caused by patient-to-patient transmission in intensive care units?* , 2005, Critical care medicine.
[2] P. Ewald,et al. Pathogen survival in the external environment and the evolution of virulence , 2004, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.
[3] Robert A. Weinstein,et al. Contamination, Disinfection, and Cross-Colonization: Are Hospital Surfaces Reservoirs for Nosocomial Infection? , 2004, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.
[4] R. Lütticken,et al. Distribution of multi-resistant Gram-negative versus Gram-positive bacteria in the hospital inanimate environment. , 2004, The Journal of hospital infection.
[5] B. Spratt,et al. How Clonal Is Staphylococcus aureus? , 2003, Journal of bacteriology.
[6] E. Feil,et al. Determining the Genetic Structure of the Natural Population of Staphylococcus aureus: a Comparison of Multilocus Sequence Typing with Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis, Randomly Amplified Polymorphic DNA Analysis, and Phage Typing , 2002, Journal of Clinical Microbiology.
[7] Andreas Voss,et al. Routine surface disinfection in health care facilities: should we do it? , 2002, American journal of infection control.
[8] A. Neely,et al. A survey of gram-negative bacteria survival on hospital fabrics and plastics. , 2000, The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation.
[9] Alice N. Neely,et al. Survival of Enterococci and Staphylococci on Hospital Fabrics and Plastic , 2000, Journal of Clinical Microbiology.
[10] J. Steer,et al. Quantitative microbiology in the management of burn patients. I. Correlation between quantitative and qualitative burn wound biopsy culture and surface alginate swab culture. , 1996, Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries.
[11] D. Maki,et al. Relation of the inanimate hospital environment to endemic nosocomial infection. , 1982, The New England journal of medicine.