tuberculous in A Sentence

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    In 1946 Gerekmezyan caught Tuberculous meningitis.

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    If Tuberculous meningitis is suspected, the sample is

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    They were based on the observation that healed Tuberculous cavities were all closed.

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    While tuberculosis of the lungs is typically treated for six months, those with Tuberculous meningitis are typically treated for a year or longer.

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    In the presence of Tuberculous empyema of the pleura, caseous pneumonia, caseous-necrotic lesion of lymph nodes- the appointment to the surgical method of treatment is strictly individual.

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    Childhood vaccination with Bacillus Calmette-Guérin has been reported to significantly reduce the rate of Tuberculous meningitis, but its waning effectiveness in adulthood has prompted a search for a better vaccine.

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    If Tuberculous meningitis is suspected, the sample is processed for Ziehl-Neelsen stain, which has a low sensitivity, and tuberculosis culture, which takes a long time to process; PCR is being used increasingly.

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    About 90% of those infected with M. tuberculosis have asymptomatic, latent TB infections(sometimes called LTBI), with only a 10% lifetime chance that the latent infection will progress to overt, active Tuberculous disease.

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    About 90% of those infected with M. tuberculosis have asymptomatic, latent TB infections(sometimes called LTBI), with only a 10% lifetime chance that the latent infection will progress to overt, active Tuberculous disease.

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    The very zone of necrosis, an inflammatory shaft around it and Tuberculous lymphangitis, which manifests itself radiologically in the form of cords from the hearth to the basal lymph nodes of the lung- was called the"primary tuberculosis affect".

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    There is good evidence from randomised-controlled trials to say that in Tuberculous lymphadenitis and in TB of the spine, the six-month regimen is equivalent to the nine-month regimen; the US recommendation is therefore not supported by the evidence.

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    The description of Tuberculous meningitis, then called"dropsy in the brain", is often attributed to Edinburgh physician Sir Robert Whytt in a posthumous report that appeared in 1768, although the link with tuberculosis and its pathogen was not made until the next century.

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