Microbiology of combat-related extremity wounds: Trauma Infectious Disease Outcomes Study.
暂无分享,去创建一个
W. Bradley | M. Krauss | D. Tribble | Joseph L. Petfield | F. Shaikh | T. Whitman | K. Mende | William P. Bradley | Qilu Yu | D. Blyth | Dan Z. Lu | L. Stewart | Lauren Greenberg | Faraz Shaikh
[1] W. Bradley,et al. Epidemiology and antimicrobial susceptibilities of wound isolates of obligate anaerobes from combat casualties. , 2016, Diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease.
[2] A. Weintrob,et al. Impact of Mucorales and Other Invasive Molds on Clinical Outcomes of Polymicrobial Traumatic Wound Infections , 2015, Journal of Clinical Microbiology.
[3] C. Murray,et al. Pathogens present in acute mangled extremities from Afghanistan and subsequent pathogen recovery. , 2015, Military medicine.
[4] W. Bradley,et al. Resistance Patterns and Clinical Significance of Candida Colonization and Infection in Combat-Related Injured Patients From Iraq and Afghanistan , 2014, Open forum infectious diseases.
[5] W. Bradley,et al. Clinical relevance of mold culture positivity with and without recurrent wound necrosis following combat-related injuries , 2014, The journal of trauma and acute care surgery.
[6] W. Bradley,et al. Combat trauma-associated invasive fungal wound infections: epidemiology and clinical classification , 2014, Epidemiology and Infection.
[7] Deepak Aggarwal,et al. Active surveillance for asymptomatic colonization with multidrug-resistant gram negative bacilli among injured service members--a three year evaluation. , 2013, MSMR.
[8] Z. Liu,et al. Microbiologic characteristics of pathogenic bacteria from hospitalized trauma patients who survived Wenchuan earthquake , 2012, European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases.
[9] A. Weintrob,et al. Infection-associated clinical outcomes in hospitalized medical evacuees after traumatic injury: trauma infectious disease outcome study. , 2011, The Journal of trauma.
[10] G. Wortmann,et al. Multidrug-resistant bacterial colonization of combat-injured personnel at admission to medical centers after evacuation from Afghanistan and Iraq. , 2011, The Journal of trauma.
[11] L. Blackbourne,et al. Infections complicating the care of combat casualties during operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom. , 2011, The Journal of trauma.
[12] David W Craft,et al. The majority of US combat casualty soft-tissue wounds are not infected or colonized upon arrival or during treatment at a continental US military medical facility. , 2010, American journal of surgery.
[13] J. Clasper,et al. Infectious complications of combat-related mangled extremity injuries in the British military. , 2010, The Journal of trauma.
[14] D. Hospenthal,et al. Changes in the Incidences of Multidrug-Resistant and Extensively Drug-Resistant Organisms Isolated in a Military Medical Center , 2010, Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology.
[15] J. Calhoun,et al. Multidrug-resistant Organisms in Military Wounds from Iraq and Afghanistan , 2008, Clinical orthopaedics and related research.
[16] C. Murray,et al. Epidemiology of infections associated with combat-related injuries in Iraq and Afghanistan. , 2008, The Journal of trauma.
[17] D. Blazes,et al. Trauma-related Infections in Battlefield Casualties From Iraq , 2007, Annals of surgery.
[18] D. Hospenthal,et al. Bacteriology of war wounds at the time of injury. , 2006, Military medicine.
[19] D. Hospenthal,et al. Bacteria recovered from patients admitted to a deployed U.S. military hospital in Baghdad, Iraq. , 2006, Military medicine.
[20] S. Flaherty,et al. Trauma system development in a theater of war: Experiences from Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom. , 2005, The Journal of trauma.
[21] S. Linn. The injury severity score--importance and uses. , 1995, Annals of epidemiology.
[22] Liping,et al. Association of Enterococcus spp. with Severe Combat Extremity Injury, Intensive Care, and Polymicrobial Wound Infection. , 2018 .
[23] S. Tyner,et al. Association of Enterococcus spp. with Severe Combat Extremity Injury, Intensive Care, and Polymicrobial Wound Infection. , 2018, Surgical infections.