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Medical microbiology, the large subset of microbiology that is applied to medicine, is a branch of medical science concerned with the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of infectious diseases. In addition, this field of science studies various clinical applications of microbes for the improvement of health.
This is a list of bacteria that are significant in medicine. For viruses, see list of ... List of bacteria genera; List of human diseases associated with infectious ...
The journal was established in 1995 and is published by Elsevier on behalf of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, of which it is the official journal. The editor-in-chief is Leonard Leibovici (Tel-Aviv University). According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2023 impact factor of 10.9. [1]
This is a list of infectious diseases arranged by name, along with the infectious agents that cause them, the vaccines that can prevent or cure them when they exist and their current status. Some on the list are vaccine-preventable diseases .
This category contains scientific and medical journals covering microbiology and infectious diseases. Subcategories This category has the following 6 subcategories, out of 6 total.
Pathogens and Disease is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research on all pathogens (eukaryotes, prokaryotes, and viruses, including zoonotic pathogens). It was originally established in 1988 as FEMS Microbiology Immunology when it split from FEMS Microbiology Letters .
(iii) With resolution of disease, the copy number of pathogen-associated nucleic acid sequences should decrease or become undetectable. With clinical relapse , the opposite should occur. (iv) When sequence detection predates disease, or sequence copy number correlates with severity of disease or pathology, the sequence-disease association is ...
Pathogenic bacteria are bacteria that can cause disease. [1] This article focuses on the bacteria that are pathogenic to humans. Most species of bacteria are harmless and many are beneficial but others can cause infectious diseases. The number of these pathogenic species in humans is estimated to be fewer than a hundred. [2]