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Incidence of diarrhea: poor parental recall ability
(2007)
Several methodological issues may have an impact on the incidence rates of childhood acute diarrhea reported by community-based studies. This study was performed to assess the impact of parental recall ability and definition ...
Incidence of diarrhea: poor parental recall ability
(Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases, 2007-12-01)
Several methodological issues may have an impact on the incidence rates of childhood acute diarrhea reported by community-based studies. This study was performed to assess the impact of parental recall ability and definition ...
Effectiveness of rotavirus vaccine against hospitalized rotavirus diarrhea: a case-control study
(Elsevier Science, 2014-05)
pic gene of enteroaggregative Escherichia coli and its association with diarrhea in Peruvian children
(Taylor and Francis, 2016)
Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (EAEC) causes acute and persistent diarrhea among children, HIV-infected patients, and travelers to developing countries. We have searched for 18 genes-encoding virulence factors associated ...
Acute diarrhea among children from high and low socioeconomic communities in Salvador, Brazil
(International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1996)
Infectious agents in acute and chronic diarrhea of chilhood
(Chronic diarrea a in children: Raven Press p. 237 - 252, 1984)
Even today acute diarrheal disease is thought of by many laymen as well as by some medical professionals in developing countries as being a syndrome of alimentary origin. Despite recognition of shigellosis, cholera, ...
Infectious agents in acute and chronic diarrhea of chilhood
(Chronic diarrea a in children: Raven Press p. 237 - 252, 1984)
Even today acute diarrheal disease is thought of by many laymen as well as by some medical professionals in developing countries as being a syndrome of alimentary origin. Despite recognition of shigellosis, cholera, ...
Infectious diarrheas of infants and young children
(1985)
Acute diarrhea' disease was once attributed to "indigestion." Although
shigellosis, cholera, salmonellosis, giardiasis, and amebiasis have long
been recognized as distinct clinical entities, it was not too long ago ...