Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Health_Conditions - Pneumonia

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-100 of 135    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Pneumonia:     more books (100)
  1. Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (Perspectives on Critical Care Infectious Diseases)
  2. Pneumonia: Webster's Timeline History, 1998 - 2005 by Icon Group International, 2009-06-06
  3. Pneumocystis Carinii Pneumonia: Pathogenesis, Diagnosis, Treatment (Lung Biology in Health and Disease)
  4. Tools predict community pneumonia's course.(Infectious Diseases): An article from: Internal Medicine News by Sherry Boschert, 2007-01-01
  5. Community-acquired pneumonia.(Clinical Guidelines For Family Physicians)(Disease/Disorder overview): An article from: Family Practice News by Neil S. Skolnik, Gina M. Menichello, 2007-09-15
  6. Atypical Pneumonia: A Medical Dictionary, Bibliography, and Annotated Research Guide to Internet References by Icon Health Publications, 2003-12
  7. Pneumonia Essentials by Burke A. Cunha, 2007-01
  8. Severe Community Acquired Pneumonia (Perspectives on Critical Care Infectious Diseases, Volume 3)
  9. Pneumonia: Its Supposed Connection, Pathological And Etiological, With Autumnal Fevers; Including An Inquiry Into The Existence And Morbid Agency Of Malaria (1854) by R. La Roche, 2010-09-10
  10. Pneumonia/Pneumococcal INF (Current Ophthalmology Monographs) by Lambert, 1980-01
  11. PneumocystisPneumonia, Third Edition (Lung Biology in Health and Disease)
  12. Community-Acquired Pneumonia
  13. Borland's Pneumonias by Borland, Douglas, 1991
  14. Outpatient Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Adults GUIDELINES Pocketcard by Infectious Diseases Society of America (Idsa), American Thoracic Society (ATS), 2010-09-01

81. Pneumonia
pneumonia Bacterial pneumonia. CommunityAcquired pneumonia. Book,Home See Also Viral pneumonia. Causes See pneumonia Causes. Signsand
http://www.fpnotebook.com/LUN78.htm
Home About Links Index ... Editor's Choice Paid Advertisement (click above). Please see the privacy statement Pulmonology Infectious Disease Bacteria Pneumonia Pneumonia Causes Pneumonia Management Aspiration Pneumonia Nosocomial Pneumonia Assorted Pages Lung abscess Viral Pneumonia Airway Bacterial tracheitis ... Histoplasmosis Pneumonia Bacterial Pneumonia Community-Acquired Pneumonia Book Home Page Cardiovascular Medicine Dental Dermatology Emergency Medicine Endocrinology Gastroenterology General Medicine Geriatric Medicine Gynecology Hematology and Oncology HIV Infectious Disease Jokes Laboratory Neonatology Nephrology Neurology Obstetrics Ophthalmology Orthopedics Otolaryngology Pediatrics Pharmacology Prevention Psychiatry Pulmonology Radiology Rheumatology Sports Medicine Surgery Urology Chapter Pulmonology Index Airway Alveoli Apnea Asthma Bacteria Bronchi Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Cardiovascular Medicine Emergency Medicine Examination Failure Fungus Gastroenterology Hematology and Oncology Infectious Disease ILD Laboratory General Obstetrics Pediatrics Pharmacology Pleura Prevention Procedures Radiology Rheumatology Sports Medicine Symptom Evaluation Tb Page Infectious Disease Index Abscess Bacteria Pneumonia Bacteria Pneumonia Causes Bacteria Pneumonia Management Bacteria Pneumonia Aspiration Bacteria Pneumonia Nosocomial Virus Pneumonia
  • See Also Viral Pneumonia Causes See Pneumonia Causes Signs and Symptoms Bacterial Pneumonia Cough productive of Purulent Sputum Sudden onset Fever and Chills Ill appearing patient Pleuritic Chest Pain Increased respiratory and
  • 82. This Page Has Moved
    Information from the Center for Disease Control
    http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/hip/pneumonia/1_asper.htm
    This page has moved, please update your bookmarks or links to the new address: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/hip/pneumonia/1_asper.htm You will be forwarded automatically in a few seconds. Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion
    National Center for Infectious Diseases
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    Atlanta, GA

    83. Pneumonia Prevention
    pneumonia Prevention It's Worth A Shot. Facts for Patients About PneumococcalDisease. What is Pneumococcal Disease? Can pneumonia Be Prevented? Yes.
    http://www.multiplan.com/healthwell/wellness/pneumonia.cfm
    Introduction
    Women's Health

    Chronic Disease Update

    Prevention Update
    ...
    Find a Hospital / Facility
    Pneumonia Prevention: It's Worth A Shot
    Facts for Patients About Pneumococcal Disease
    What is Pneumococcal Disease?
    Pneumococcal (pronounced new-mo-KOK-al) disease is an infection caused by bacteria. These bacteria can attack different parts of the body. When they invade the lungs, they cause the most common kind of bacterial pneumonia. When the same bacteria attack blood cells, they cause an infection called bacteremia (bak-ter-E-me-ah). And in the brain, they cause meningitis. Pnemococcal pneumonia is a serious illness that kills thousands of older people in the United States each year.
    Can Pneumonia Be Prevented?
    Yes. The pneumococcal vaccine is safe, it works, and one shot lasts most people a lifetime. People who get the vaccine are protected against almost all of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia and other pneumococcal diseases as well. The shot, which is covered by Medicare, can be a lifesaver.
    Who Should Get the Vaccine?

    84. Untitled
    If your browser does not automatically take you to the updatedpage, click here. Please update your bookmarks accordingly.
    http://www.multiplan.com/healthwell/wellness/pneumonia.html
    If your browser does not automatically take you to the updated page, click here Please update your bookmarks accordingly.

    85. The Political Graveyard: Politicians Who Died Of Lung Or Respiratory Diseases
    incident. Died, of pneumonia, in Zarnowiec, Poland, December 24, 1812. 1827.Died, of pneumonia, in February 1827. Burial location unknown.
    http://politicalgraveyard.com/death/lung.html
    Questions? Return to The Political Graveyard main page
    Politicians Who Died of Lung or Respiratory Diseases
    Very incomplete list!
    See also lung cancer and tuberculosis in chronological order

    86. Pneumococcal Infections
    Recognizing, treating, and preventing infections caused by streptococcus pneumoniae. Consumer information about pneumonia, otitis, bloodstream infections, and meningitis caused by streptococcus pneumoniae. Information about vaccines and antibiotic treatment.
    http://www.nfid.org/library/pneumococcal

    87. Medic-Planet Pneumonia
    pneumonia Advertisement See also Autoimmune diseases, Bacteria and disease, Environmentand disease, Fungus diseases, Legionnaires' disease, Pneumocystis
    http://www.medic-planet.com/MP_article/internal_reference/pneumonia

    88. This Page Has Moved
    Issues, recommendations, appendices, tables and references related to the prevention of nosocomial pneumonia.
    http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/hip/pneumonia/pneu_mmw.htm
    This page has moved, please update your bookmarks or links to the new address: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/hip/pneumonia/pneu_mmw.htm You will be forwarded automatically in a few seconds. Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion
    National Center for Infectious Diseases
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    Atlanta, GA

    89. Medic-Planet Pneumonia
    pneumonia Advertisement See also Autoimmune diseases, Bacteria and disease, Environmentand disease, Fungus diseases, Legionnaires' disease, Pneumocystis
    http://www.medic-planet.com/MP_article/internal_reference/Pneumonia

    90. Pneumonia
    pneumonia. Definition. pneumonia is an infection of the lung, and can be causedby nearly any class of organism known to cause human infections.
    http://www.chclibrary.org/micromed/00061150.html

    Main Search Index
    Definition Description Causes ... Resources
    Pneumonia
    Definition
    Pneumonia is an infection of the lung, and can be caused by nearly any class of organism known to cause human infections. These includes bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. In the United States, pneumonia is the sixth most common disease leading to death . It is also the most common fatal infection acquired by already hospitalized patients. In developing countries, pneumonia ties with diarrhea as the most common cause of death. Description
    Anatomy of the lung

    To better understand pneumonia, it is important to understand the basic anatomic features of the respiratory system. The human respiratory system begins at the nose and mouth, where air is breathed in (inspired) and out (expired). The air tube extending from the nose is called the nasopharynx. The tube carrying air breathed in through the mouth is called the oropharynx. The nasopharynx and the oropharynx merge into the larynx. The oropharynx also carries swallowed substances, including food, water, and salivary secretion which must pass into the esophagus and then the stomach. The larynx is protected by a trap door called the epiglottis. The epiglottis prevents substances which have been swallowed, as well as substances which have been regurgitated (thrown up), from heading down into the larynx and toward the lungs. A useful method of picturing the respiratory system is to imagine an upside-down tree. The larynx flows into the trachea, which is the tree trunk, and thus the broadest part of the respiratory tree. The trachea divides into two tree limbs, the right and left bronchi. Each one of these branches off into multiple smaller bronchi, which course through the tissue of the lung. Each bronchus divides into tubes of smaller and smaller diameter, finally ending in the terminal bronchioles. The air sacs of the lung, in which oxygen-carbon dioxide exchange actually takes place, are clustered at the ends of the bronchioles like the leaves of a tree. They are called alveoli.

    91. Health Ency.: Disease: Pneumonia
    pneumonia See images. Alternative names Pneumonitis; Bronchopneumonia;Communityacquired pneumonia. Definition pneumonia is an
    http://www.austin360.com/shared/health/adam/ency/article/000145.html
    SEARCH: The Web
    Yellow Pages
    HOME

    Illustrated Health Encyclopedia

    Important notice
    Ency. home Disease P Pneumonia See images Overview Symptoms Treatment ... Prevention Alternative names: Pneumonitis; Bronchopneumonia; Community-acquired pneumonia Definition: Pneumonia is an inflammation of the lungs caused by a bacterial, viral, or fungal infection. Causes and Risks Pneumonia is a very common, often serious illness that affects about 3-4 million people each year in the United States. Many different organisms can cause pneumonia, including bacteria, viruses, and fungi. Bacterial pneumonias tend to be the most serious. In adults, bacteria are the most common cause, and of these Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) is the most common. Respiratory viruses are the most common causes of pneumonia in young children, peaking between the ages of 2 and 3. By school age, the bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae becomes more common. In some people, particularly the elderly and those who are debilitated, pneumonia may follow influenza Pneumonia is classified according to a number of different systems. One classification system divides pneumonia into "community-acquired" (pneumonia contracted outside of a health-care institution) and "hospital-acquired" (acquired in a hospital or other long-term health care facility). Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most common form of community-acquired pneumonia.

    92. Infectious Diseases - Pneumonia - Methodist Health Care System, Houston, Texas
    pneumonia What is pneumonia? Bronchial pneumonia (or bronchopneumonia) affectspatches throughout both lungs. What are the different types of pneumonia?
    http://www.methodisthealth.com/infectious/pneumonia.htm

    Infectious

    Diseases Home
    Las Enfermedades
    Infecciosas
    ... (en español) Clinical Services
    The Methodist Hospital

    Methodist Diagnostic Hospital

    Methodist Sugar Land Hospital

    Methodist Willowbrook Hospital
    ... Statistics Infectious Diseases:
    Anthrax

    HIV/AIDS

    Botulism
    Chickenpox ... Whooping Cough (Pertussis) Prevention of Infectious Diseases: Handwashing Immunizations Pets and Infectious Diseases Infectious Diseases on the Job ... Appointment Pneumonia What is pneumonia? Pneumonia is an inflammation of the lungs caused by bacteria, viruses, or chemical irritants. It is a serious infection or inflammation in which the air sacs fill with pus and other liquid.
    • Lobar pneumonia affects one or more sections (lobes) of the lungs. Bronchial pneumonia (or bronchopneumonia) affects patches throughout both lungs.
    What are the different types of pneumonia? The main types of pneumonia are:
    • Bacterial pneumonia is caused by various bacteria. The Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most common bacterium that causes bacterial pneumonia.

    93. Health A To Z
    Information via question and answer format about pneumonia and bronchitis, including risk factors, symptoms and treatment.
    http://www.healthatoz.com/atoz/pneumonia/pneuindex.html

    94. Respiratory Disorders - Pneumonia - Methodist Health Care System, Houston, Texas
    pneumonia. What is pneumonia? Bronchial pneumonia (or bronchopneumonia) affectspatches throughout both lungs. What are the different types of pneumonia?
    http://www.methodisthealth.com/pulmonary/pneumoni.htm

    Respiratory

    Disorders Home

    Page
    Los Trastornos Respiratorios
    (en español) Clinical Services
    The Methodist Hospital

    Methodist Diagnostic Hospital Sleep Disorder Center

    Methodist Sugar Land Hospital

    Methodist Willowbrook Hospital
    ... Spirometers Upper Respiratory Infections:
    Common cold

    Influenza
    Pharyngitis/Tonsillitis Sinusitis ... Appointment Pneumonia What is pneumonia? Pneumonia is an inflammation of the lungs caused by bacteria, viruses, or chemical irritants. It is a serious infection or inflammation in which the air sacs fill with pus and other liquid.
    • Lobar pneumonia affects one or more sections (lobes) of the lungs. Bronchial pneumonia (or bronchopneumonia) affects patches throughout both lungs.
    What are the different types of pneumonia? The main types of pneumonia are:
    • Bacterial pneumonia is caused by various bacteria. The Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most common bacterium that causes bacterial pneumonia. It usually occurs when the body is weakened in some way, such as illness, malnutrition, old age, or impaired immunity, and the bacteria are able to work their way into the lungs. Bacterial pneumonia can affect all ages, but those at greater risk include the following:

    95. Pneumonia, Disease Of The Lower Respiratory System. Information By Treasure Vall
    TVSP . pneumonia. Coughing and snotty noses are diseases of the upper respiratorysystem. pneumonia is a disease of the lower respiratory system.
    http://www.tvsp.org/pneumonia.html
    "TVSP"
    PNEUMONIA
    Coughing and snotty noses are diseases of the upper respiratory system. Pneumonia is a disease of the lower respiratory system. Although snotty noses and coughing can also be present when an animal had pneumonia, they usually aren't a sign of pneumonia.
    Signs of pneumonia are droopiness, rapid breathing, and lack of appetite. If it is within a month of sale time, call your veterinarian. The drug to use is Naxcel, which is quite effective against pneumonia and has no withdrawal time. If the fair is more than a month away, use the long acting tetracycline as described above. Pneumonia is a life threatening disease. Early treatment is important.
    Outdoor Flood Light Camera
    Excellent method to watch your ewes during lambing. Just screw this camera into a extension cord and watch your lambing ewe or sick lambs on TV. This unique camera is simple to install. Just screw the light into any standard light socket and plug the receiver into any outlet up to 2000 feet away on the same power circuit. The video signal and power are all transmitted through your existing AC wiring using a proprietary induction RF system. The CVL-32 is perfect for outdoor installations. Installs in minutes to react to trouble spots fast. Field of view is 80 degrees. Bright LED illuminators aid visibility in low light applications.

    96. Postgraduate Medicine: Patient Notes: Recognizing Pneumonia
    Recognizing pneumonia. VOL 103 / NO 4 / APRIL 1999 / POSTGRADUATE MEDICINE. pneumoniais an infection or inflammation of the smallest air passages in the lungs.
    http://www.postgradmed.com/issues/1999/04_99/pn_pneumonia.htm
    Patient Notes
    Recognizing pneumonia
    VOL 103 / NO 4 / APRIL 1999 / POSTGRADUATE MEDICINE Pneumonia is an infection or inflammation of the smallest air passages in the lungs. Infection can be caused by any of dozens of bacteria, viruses, and fungal organisms. Inflammation can result from inhaling dust, chemicals, food, or vomit. Pneumonia can be a very dangerous disease if it is not recognized and treated early. When you have pneumonia, the tiny air sacs in your lungs (alveoli) fill with pus and other liquid. Oxygen then can't reach your blood. If your blood contains too little oxygen, your body's cells can't work properly and you become ill. There are several different kinds of pneumonia, but bacterial, viral, and a less typical type called mycoplasmal pneumonia are the most common. The viruses and bacteria that cause pneumonia are contagious and are usually found in fluid from the mouth or nose of an infected person. Illness can spread through exposure to coughs and sneezes, shared drinking glasses and eating utensils, and used tissues or handkerchiefs. Bacterial pneumonia This is the most serious type of pneumonia and can attack anyonefrom infants to the very old. People with respiratory disease and weakened immune systems are at greatest risk.

    97. Postgraduate Medicine: Pneumonia Symposium Introduction
    Communityacquired pneumonia at the end of the 20th century. In fact, the designation atypical pneumonia has no useful meaning and should be abandoned.
    http://www.postgradmed.com/issues/1999/04_99/symp_int.htm
    Community-acquired pneumonia at the end of the 20th century
    A three-article symposium
    Symposium coordinator George A. Sarosi, MD
    Chief, Medical Service
    Richard L. Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center
    Professor of Medicine
    Indiana University School of Medicine
    Indianapolis
    VOL 105 / NO 4 / APRIL 1999 / POSTGRADUATE MEDICINE
    Each year, close to 4 million episodes of community-acquired pneumonia occur in the United States, about 500,000 of them necessitating hospitalization. In the vast majority of cases, patients are seen initially by a primary care physician in an office setting, an urgent-care facility, or an emergency department. When evaluating a patient who has a lower respiratory tract infection, the first question a physician asks himself or herself is whether the patient has pneumonia. This question cannot be answered adequately without a chest radiograph; physical examination simply is not sensitive enough to detect the difference between pneumonia and an exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

    98. Pneumonia - Symptoms, Causes Of This Infection Of The Lungs
    pneumonia. What is pneumonia? pneumonia is infection of the lungs. The infection hospital.What causes pneumonia and who is at risk? pneumonia
    http://hcd2.bupa.co.uk/fact_sheets/mosby_factsheets/Pneumonia.html

    99. What Is Bacterial Pneumonia?
    Bacterial pneumonia is an infection of the lungs that involves the small airsacs or alveoli and the tissues around them. What is bacterial pneumonia?
    http://utut.essortment.com/pneumoniawhatb_rqty.htm

    100. Pneumonia
    Respiratory. pneumonia. pneumonia refers to infection of the lungs. pneumoniaWhat is pneumonia? pneumonia refers to infection of the lungs.
    http://jhhs.client.web-health.com/web-health/topics/GeneralHealth/generalhealths

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 5     81-100 of 135    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | Next 20

    free hit counter