Endotoxin and Bacteremia Due to Gram-Negative Organisms
- 10 December 1970
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 283 (24) , 1342-1343
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197012102832412
Abstract
The impact of social progress and medical advances on the health problems of the nation is, perhaps, most clearly apparent in the area of bacterial infections. Although fatalities resulting from community-acquired infections, such as pneumonia and tuberculosis, have decreased strikingly, hospital-acquired infections have become increasingly important. An earlier Journal editorial labeled the staphylococcus as the new "Captain of the men of death."1 Subsequently, for unexplained reasons, the frequency of staphylococcal infections diminished strikingly in the United States but not in Europe. This left no void, however, since gramnegative bacilli have become the most recent plague to visit patients within our . . .Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Use of a Bioassay for Endotoxin in Clinical InfectionsThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1970
- The role of endotoxin during typhoid fever and tularemia in manJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1969
- Pneumonias Caused byEscherichia coliNew England Journal of Medicine, 1967
- Captain StaphylococcusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1956