Community-acquired bloodstream infections (CBSIs) occur in the out-of-hospital setting (44%) and increase the overall mortality from bloodstream infections (BSIs) by 7.2% per year. The development of CBSIs depends on both comorbid and polymorbid diseases and the patients' age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComputer morphometry was used to analyze morphologically and histochemically the smears of the gingival and buccal epithelium obtained from women at the secretion and proliferation phases of the menstrual cycle. A variety of reliably statistic differences conditioned by a menstrual-cycle phase was found to be typical of the gingival epithelium. A high percentage of epitheliocytes of differentiation terminal stages as well as signs of enhanced protein-synthesizing processes were typical of the cells ratio in the gingival epithelium at the secretion phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMorphological analysis of smears of the gingival epithelium by computer-aided morphometry was carried out in women during the secretory and proliferation phases of the menstrual cycle. During the secretory phase the cell ratio was characterized by higher percentage of epitheliocytes in the terminal stages of differentiation. Size of the nuclei and cytoplasm of intermediate cells, concentration of total protein in them, number of the nucleolar organizer zones, and degree of bacterial contamination of epitheliocytes is higher during the secretory phase than during the proliferation phase.
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