Study of community acquired pneumonia aetiology (SCAPA) in adults admitted to hospital: implications for management guidelines
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ID: 266163
2001
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Abstract
S pneumoniae remains the most important pathogen to cover by initial antibiotic therapy in adults of all ages admitted to hospital with CAP. Atypical pathogens are more common in younger patients. They should also be covered in all patients with severe pneumonia and younger patients with non-severe …
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ws2001thoraxstudy
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| Authors | Lim WS;Macfarlane JT;Boswell TC;Harrison TG;Rose D;Leinonen M;Saikku P;; |
| Journal | Thorax |
| Year | 2001 |
| DOI |
DOI not found
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| Keywords |
National Center for Biotechnology Information
NCBI
NLM
MEDLINE
humans
pubmed abstract
nih
national institutes of health
national library of medicine
research support
non-u.s. gov't
adult
female
male
adolescent
aged
middle aged
Prospective Studies
80 and over
community-acquired infections / microbiology
Cohort Studies
pneumonia
multivariate analysis
hospitalization
bacterial / diagnosis
bacterial / drug therapy
bacterial / microbiology*
anti-bacterial agents / therapeutic use*
community-acquired infections / diagnosis
viral / diagnosis
viral / drug therapy
community-acquired infections / therapy
pmid:11254821
pmc1746017
doi:10.1136/thorax.56.4.296
w s lim
j t macfarlane
p saikku
viral / virology*
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