TY - BOOK AU - David Schlossberg TI - Clinical Infectious Disease: Cambridge medicine SN - 110703891X AV - RC111 U1 - 616.9–dc23 PY - 2015/// CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press KW - N1 - Contents: head and neck Sinusitis Deep neck infections Conjunctivitis Keratitis Iritis Endophthalmitis Periocular infections Tickborne disease Travelers diarrhea bacteria Anaerobic infections Anthrax and other Bacillus species Bartonella bacilliformis Bordetella Brucellosis Staphylococcal and streptococcal toxic shock and Kawasaki syndromes Eumycetoma respiratory tract Atypical pneumonia Nosocomial pneumonia Lung abscess heart and blood vessels Acute pericarditis Myocarditis Mediastinitis Infections of cardiovascular implantable electronic devices and VAD cholecystitis and cholangitis Pyogenic liver abscess Esophageal infections Gastroenteritis Food poisoning Antibioticassociated diarrhea Acute appendicitis Abdominal abscess Peritonitis Whipples disease Epididymoorchitis Prostatitis Candiduria musculoskeletal system Bursitis Iliopsoas abscess neurologic system Reye syndrome Prion diseases Corticosteroids cytotoxic agents and infection Infections in transplant recipients Diabetes and infection Infectious complications in the injection and noninjection drug user Infections in the alcoholic Infections in the elderly infectious risks Dialysisrelated infection Overwhelming postsplenectomy infection Part XII antiretroviral therapy Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome IRIS Differential diagnosis and management of HIVassociated opportunistic infections Prophylaxis of opportunistic infections in HIV disease Nosocomial infection risks and prevention Hospitalacquired fever Intravascular catheterrelated infections Infections related to surgery and trauma Infected implants Prevention of infection Surgical prophylaxis Immunizations Travel and recreation Fever in the returning traveler Campylobacter Corynebacteria Enterobacteriaceae Enterococcus Erysipelothrix Helicobacter pylori Neisseria gonorrhoeae Legionellosis Leprosy Listeria Nocardia Pneumococcus Pseudomonas Stenotrophomonas and Burkholderia Ratbite fevers Staphylococcus Streptococcus groups A B C D and G Viridans streptococci Shigella Tuberculosis Vibrios spirochetes Lyme disease Relapsing fever borreliosis Mycoplasma and Chlamydia Chlamydia pneumoniae Rickettsia Ehrlichia and Anaplasma Ehrlichiosis and anaplasmosis Candidiasis Aspergillosis Mucormycosis and entomophthoramycosis Cryptococcus Histoplasmosis Coccidioidomycosis Pneumocystis jirovecii carinii viruses Dengue EpsteinBarr virus and other causes of the mononucleosis syndrome Hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome in the Americas Human herpesviruses 6 7 8 Influenza Papillomavirus in orogenital infection Rabies Varicellazoster virus Viral hemorrhagic fevers parasites Tissue nematodes Schistosomes and other trematodes Tapeworms cestodes Malaria Human babesiosis Trypanosomiases and leishmaniases Antifungal therapy Antiviral therapy Probiotics Antimicrobial agent tables N2 - A fully updated version of this popular, clinically oriented, user-friendly text on infectious disease, with even more helpful graphics, tables, algorithms and images. It is packed full of information on diagnosis, differential diagnosis and therapy. In addition to the traditional organization of organ-system and pathogen-related information, this text also includes clinically helpful sections on the susceptible host (with individual chapters, for example, on the diabetic, the elderly, the injection drug user and the neonate), infections related to travel, infections related to surgery and trauma, nosocomial infection and bioterrorism. Positioned between the available encyclopedic tomes and the smaller pocket guides, this is a convenient, comprehensive and highly practical reference for all those practising in infectious diseases as well as internal or general medicine; Common terms and phrases: abdominal abscess acute adults aeruginosa agents ampicillin anaerobic antibiotic antibiotic therapy antibody antimicrobial antimicrobial therapy aspiration associated Azithromycin bacteremia bacterial biopsy blood cultures Cambridge University Press Candida cause ceftriaxone cells cellulitis cephalosporin chronic ciprofloxacin Clin clindamycin Clinical Infectious Disease common community-acquired complications David Schlossberg diagnosis dose doxycycline drainage drug empiric endocarditis endophthalmitis etiology fever fluid fluoroquinolones fungal gentamicin Gram gram-negative hepatitis hospital immunocompromised increased infection inflammation inflammatory influenza initial intravenous involvement lesions levofloxacin liver lymphadenopathy mediastinitis Medical Medicine meningitis metronidazole mg/kg MRSA myocarditis necrosis necrotizing nodes occur onset oral organisms pain pathogens patients penicillin pericarditis pneumonia present Published by Cambridge recurrent regimen renal resistance respiratory sepsis skin specific Staphylococcus aureus Streptococcus surgery surgical symptoms syndrome Table tests tion tissue treated treatment ulcers University Press 2015 usually vaccine vaginal vancomycin viral virus viruses weeks þ þ ER -