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streptomycin

Examples

  • streptomycin synonyms, streptomycin antonyms. Information about streptomycin in the free online English streptomycin - an antibiotic produced by the actinomycete Streptomyces griseus and used to treat tuberculosis. — “streptomycin - definition of streptomycin by the Free Online”,
  • Encyclopedia article about Streptomycin. Information about Streptomycin in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. — “Streptomycin definition of Streptomycin in the Free Online”, encyclopedia2
  • Streptomycin is also highly active against gram-negative aerobic pathogens with some activity against gram-positive cocci. Widespread resistance of Enterobacteriaceae has also restricted the use of streptomycin to a few specific clinical situations.1 In general it is now reserved for. — “the Drug Monitor - streptomycin - Nasr Anaizi, PhD”,
  • streptomycin (drug), antibiotic synthesized by the soil organism Streptomyces griseus. Streptomycin was discovered by American biochemists Selman Waksman, Albert Schatz, and Elizabeth Bugie in 1943. The drug acts by interfering with the ability. — “streptomycin (drug) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia”,
  • Learn about the prescription medication Streptomycin (Streptomycin), drug uses, dosage, side effects, drug interactions, warnings, reviews and patient labeling. — “Streptomycin (Streptomycin) Drug Information: User Reviews”,
  • Streptomycin. The discovery of streptomycin by microbiologist Selman Abraham Waksman (1888-1973; winner of the 1952 Nobel Prize in medicine) occurred in the mid-1940s. Streptomycin has also been found effective in treating several other infectious diseases. — “Streptomycin - first, body, plant, uses, The Search Begins”,
  • Streptomycin What conditions might Streptomycin treat? Condition. Ratings and Reviews. User ratings on perceived effectiveness. Average of visitor reported ratings on their perceived effectiveness of the drug in question. — “Streptomycin - Side Effects, Dosage, Interactions - Drugs”,
  • Streptomycin is an antibiotic drug, the first of a class of drugs called aminoglycosides Streptomycin cannot be given orally, but must be administered by regular intramuscular. — “Streptomycin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia”,
  • streptomycin n. An antibiotic, C 21 H 39 O 12 N 7 , produced by the actinomycete Streptomyces griseus, used to treat tuberculosis and other. — “streptomycin: Definition from ”,
  • "CONCLUSIONS: Streptomycin should be added to the list of drugs that induce TEN. 6. "A case of pulmonary tuberculosis associated with severe skin eruption, prominent eosinophilia, and liver dysfunction induced by streptomycin". — “WAVE - Vaccine Ingredients Streptomycin”,
  • Streptomycin Manufacturers & Streptomycin Suppliers Directory - Find a Streptomycin Manufacturer and Supplier. Choose quality Streptomycin Manufacturers, Suppliers, Exporters at . — “Streptomycin-Streptomycin Manufacturers, Suppliers and”,
  • Streptomycin is also called streptomycine, streptomycin sulfate or streptomycin nitrate. Streptomycin is a General Use Pesticide (GUP) registered for use on fruits and vegetables. — “Streptomycin”, pmep.cce.cornell.edu
  • single-drug studies of susceptibilities of Mycobacterium kansasii to isoniazid, streptomycin, and ethambutol; Tsang AY et al.; The effects of combined drugs were compared uith the effects of single drugs in vitro against Mycobacterium kansasii. — “Streptomycin”,
  • THE INCIDENCE OF CLINICALLY DETECTABLE, IRREVERSIBLE VESTIBULAR DAMAGE IS PARTICULARLY HIGH IN PATIENTS TREATED WITH STREPTOMYCIN. RENAL FUNCTION SHOULD BE MONITORED CAREFULLY: PATIENTS WITH RENAL IMPAIRMENT AND/OR NITROGEN RETENTION SHOULD RECEIVE REDUCED DOSAGES. — “Streptomycin Sulfate”, ***
  • Dp Booster Pws (D-Pantothenic Acid (Calcium D-Pantothenate) + Menadione + Nicotinic Acid + Penicillin G Potassium + Pyridoxine Hydrochloride + Streptomycin (Streptomycin Sulfate) + Vitamin a + Vitamin B1 + Vitamin B12 + Vitamin B2 + Vitamin D3 + Vitamin E). — “DrugBank: Showing Streptomycin (DB01082)”, drugbank.ca
  • INTRODUCTION: Streptomycin is a human antibiotic drug which also is used to control bacteria, fungi, and algae in crops. Breakdown of Chemical in Vegetation: Residues of streptomycin are not detectable in or on crops when treated. — “EXTOXNET PIP - STREPTOMYCIN”, extoxnet.orst.edu
  • streptomycin. streptomycin (strep"tōmī'sin) [key], antibiotic produced by soil bacteria of the genus Streptomyces and active against both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria (see Gram's stain), including species resistant to other antibiotics,. — “streptomycin — ”,
  • STREPTOMYCIN 1. EXPLANATION Streptomycin is a natural aminoglycoside antibiotic produced by the soil Actinomycete Streptomyces griseus. Streptomycin is used in combination with penicillins for the treatment of bacterial infections in cattle, sheep and pigs. — “821. Streptomycin (WHO Food Additives Series 34)”,
  • Accurate, FDA approved Streptomycin information for healthcare professionals and patients - brought to you by . — “Streptomycin Official FDA information, side effects and uses”,
  • Revolution Health Anti-Infectives / Antituberculosis Agents / Streptomyces Derivatives. Type: Prescription (Generic) How much does Streptomycin cost? Average price: $ $ $ $ $ Cost. The cost rating is based on the average wholesale price for a drug. — “Streptomycin - Drugs & Treatments - Revolution Health”,
  • Streptomycin is an antibiotic drug, the first of a class of drugs called aminoglycosides to be discovered, and was the first antibiotic remedy for tuberculosis. It is derived from the actinobacterium Streptomyces griseus. Streptomycin is a. — “Streptomycin”,
  • Streptomycin symptoms, causes, diagnosis, and treatment information for Streptomycin (Streptomycin - Teratogenic Agent) with alternative diagnoses, full-text book chapters, misdiagnosis, research treatments, prevention, and prognosis. — “Streptomycin - ”,

Images

  • streptomycin 24 and tetracyclines 19 The proportion of reported MDR isolates was 7 Tables 4 and 5 The proportion of MDR isolates reported in the third quarter of 2006 was 11
  • of cell damage Jb Figure 1 Ja Jb In Streptomycin group histopathological changes were vacuolization demonstrated in cytoplasm of primary spermatocyte Figure 1 H DISCUSSION
  • RootsMedicineEbersPa > 26 Jun 2009 11 59 141k pillsinpestle jpeg 21 Sep 2009 16 10 134k HistoryTreamtmentStr > 26 Jun 2009 11 59 128k
  • the new antibiotic streptomycin was available and thirdly because my heart was strong enough to stand the strain and because I must have had a will to live Hyperactivity In my early years my mother says I was Hyperactive a catch all title which it appears related to my stay in hospital according to my mother in that
  • Laboratory diagnosis is based on an agglutination test on isolated bacteria Treatment is with streptomycin Tularemia Cases in the United States
  • BioInformatics Genomics BB943 Sequence 22 BY David C Horne Scott Telfer
  • mg day and streptomycin sulfate SM 0 75 g day After 2 weeks of chemotherapy he noticed low back pain again and an abnormal left psoas shadow was found on plain abdominal roentgenogram Fig 3 Six weeks later ethambutol hydrochloride EB 750 mg day was administered instead of SM because SM resistance was identified On July 25 2001 the levels of ESR and CRP became
  • 0 How can we use this information to utilize ammonium sulfate precipitation as a useful purification step in our overall purification procedure Let s begin by calculating the specific
  • were resistant to both streptomycin and gentamicin Simultaneous resistance to streptomycin and to erythromycin was detected in 50 of the E faecalis isolates from pasteurized milk Table IV DISCUSSION The enterococci have emerged as important opportunistic pathogens with a remarkable capacity of expressing resistance to several groups of
  • INHIBITORS OF TRANSLATION Table 34 4 Numerous antibiotics inhibit different stages of protein synthesis see Table 30 5 Streptomycin for example both inhibits initiation and causes misreading of codons Its site of action is associated with protein S12 and with specific 16S rRNA sequences Also
  • Medical Research Council Streptomycin treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis BMJ 1948 2 769 82
  • Streptomycin interferes with binding of formylmethionyl tRNA to ribosome HERE
  • Jacobs A Borthwick WM 1950 Streptomycin in urinary tuberculosis Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine 43 453 466
  • de resistência à estreptomicina em Xanthomonas spp associadas à mancha bacteriana foram anteriormente relatados Ritchie Dittapongpitch 1991 Sahin Miller 1996 Na Tabela 2 estão compilados os dados relativos às coletas realizadas no município de Morrinhos em 1998 A alta freqüência de isolados resistentes à estreptomicina 88 a 100
  • streptomycin PubChem Notes
  • Streptomycin C PubChem Notes
  • 时间 2009 03 19 15 57 00 作者 wu xue qiong lu yang etc
  • Streptomyces griseus streptomycin S kanamyceticus kanamycin S erythraeus erytromycin S venezuelae chloramfenikol S aureofaciens chlortetracyklin a S fradiae neomycin Obr Kolonie rodu Streptomyces
  • 기저막의 유모세포에 전해지는 분량이 많아지기 때문이라고 생각된다 유모세포는 streptomycin 중독 때에는 퇴화해서 흥분성을 잃는다
  • norfloxacinに感性 ampicillin ABPC streptomycin nalidixic acid sulfamethoxazole trimethoprim tetracyclineに耐性を示した 詳細は IASR 27 264 265 2006 第1報 表 参照 近年 世界的規模で増加が著しいCTX M 型β lactamasesには 大きく分けてCTX M 1 group CTX M 2 group CTX M 9 group およびCTX M 8 groupの4つの
  • Lanes 1 and 12 Positive control 2 Isoniazid 3 Streptomycin 4 Ethambutol 5 Rifampicin 6 Kanamycin 7 Amikacin 8 Ciprofloxacin 9 Roxithromycin 10 Clofazamine 11 Blank
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  • see larger image Overview
  • penicillin and streptomycin Overuse of antibiotics has selected for resistant strains which now threaten to become more predominant than the susceptible ones Stabilizing Selection Stabilizing selection favors the most common forms of a trait in a population It counters the effects of mutation genetic drift and gene flow For example humans who weigh about seven
  • Figure 8 1 Growth on streptomycin plates An example showing the growth of microbes on Nutrient Agar NA NA + 10 µg streptomycin and NA + 100 µg streptomycin
  • 时间 2009 03 19 15 57 00 作者 wu xue qiong lu yang etc
  • Antibiotic Agar No 5 Streptomycin Assay Agar USP CB2 1524 Uses For use in the potency assay of streptomycin
  • a high degree of efficacy with a relative toxicity to the patient during treatment these include isoniazid rifampicin streptomycin ethambutol pyrazinamide and fluoro quinolones Fig 2 Second line drugs are mainly bacteriostatic which have a lower efficacy and are usually more toxic these include para aminosalicylic acid ethionamide and cycloserine
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  • His other example is the case of resistance to the antibiotic streptomycin Streptomycin kills bacteria by interfering with protein assembly on the ribosome Mutation of the rspL gene
  • Sign Up to see the image without SAMPLE View Demo plates Visual Mnemonic Aminoglycosides Tobramycin Amikacin Gentamicin Neomycin Netilmicin Streptomycin Pseudomonas Tularemia Klebsiella Vibrio Cholera Tuberculosis Enterococcus
  • degeneration appeared in somniferous tubules and congestion in veins were increased in all experimental groups as compared with those seen in the control group Figure1 C Transmission Electron microscopic In control group Spermatogonia cells were normal Ea primary spermatocyte mitochondria seemed normal with cristae Eb Nucleus was euchromatin
  • B C
  • Fig 3 The restriction map of ExKmPAQ1Sp in which aadA streptomycin spectinomycin resistance and expression cassette are in opposite transcriptional directions Another
  • Abbreviation Amp ampicillin Cm chloramphenicol Km kanamycin Sm streptomycin SxT Sulphamethoxazole trimethoprim Tet tetracycline Discussion The potential for transfer of antimicrobial resistance from enteric zoonotic bacteria of food animals to the human population is a cause of concern 12 Contact with food
  • resistens overfor Streptomycin STR Ampicillin AMP Sulphamethoxazole SMX og Tetracyclin TET mens ingen besætninger var resistente overfor Ciproflaxin CIP og Colistin COL Figur 1 Procent besætninger med resistent bakterievækst i gødningsprøverne indenfor hver af de 18 forskellige antibiotika De anvendte forkortelser på antibiotika præparaterne er
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  • MATERIAL E MÉTODOS Trezentos e oitenta e nove isolados pertencentes às espécies X axonopodis pv vesicatoria X vesicatoria e X gardneri foram ***isados Tabela 1 Para obtenção dos isolados folhas e frutos apresentando sintomas de mancha bacteriana foram coletados em campos com alta incidência da doença 50 100 das plantas
  • France Streptomycin for tuberculosis Changing the Face of a Continent
  • protein SBFP2 and a streptomycin resistance gene We are currently working on incorporating our Genetic Attenuators in our PHB pathway to synthesize bioplastic Genetic Attenuator We have created a template plasmid that can be used to characterize terminators for use as Genetic Attenuators Derived from Caitlin Conboy s work characterizing terminators in the

Videos

  • Lemeshev - Song of the Indian Guest: Rimsky-Korsakov Many thanks to younglemeshevist for this valuable information: Lemeshev was already popular by the time The Musical Story was made (it's here on YT). He sang in the Stanislavsky opera studio in 1924-1926 and then in theaters of Sverdlovsk (now Samara), Harbin (Manchuria) and Tbilisi (Georgian republic). The Musical story and The Leningrad concert hall ( he sang the Duke)1941, were the last films where Lemeshev was perfectly healthy. In October 1941 The Bolshoi company left Moscow, but there was such panic during the evacuation, that many people missed the train. Lemeshev was among them. He spent many hours at the station, the weather was bad and he fell ill with pneumonia complicated with pleurisy . Four months later he fell ill again with the same combination of pneumonia and pleurisy. This resulted in tuberculosis of the right lung. The only effective treatment in those years in the USSR was an artificial pneumothorax (collapsing of the lung). Vishnevskaya refused from pneumothorax and survived because streptomycin appeared in 1948. Lemeshev sang ( 26 performances a month) with one collapsed lung from 1942 to 1948 and made almost all his recordings of complete operas (The Snowmaid, Mozart and Salieri, Lakme, The Pearlfishers). His lung was not removed and though he recovered from tuberculosis, it could not function properly. Besides, his voice started to deteriorate and Lemeshev began to drink heavily. He had the ability avoid scandals when drunk, so his reputation was ...
  • Lemeshev Rimsky-Korsakov Mélodie 1947; Abram Makaroff piano Many thanks to younglemeshevist for this rare information: Lemeshev was already popular by the time The Musical Story was made (it's here on YT). He sang in the Stanislavsky opera studio in 1924-1926 and then in theaters of Sverdlovsk (now Samara), Harbin (Manchuria) and Tbilisi (Georgian republic). The Musical story and The Leningrad concert hall ( he sang the Duke)1941, were the last films where Lemeshev was perfectly healthy. In October 1941 The Bolshoi company left Moscow, but there was such panic during the evacuation, that many people missed the train. Lemeshev was among them. He spent many hours at the station, the weather was bad and he fell ill with pneumonia complicated with pleurisy . Four months later he fell ill again with the same combination of pneumonia and pleurisy. This resulted in tuberculosis of the right lung. The only effective treatment in those years in the USSR was an artificial pneumothorax (collapsing of the lung). Vishnevskaya refused from pneumothorax and survived because streptomycin appeared in 1948. Lemeshev sang ( 26 performances a month) with one collapsed lung from 1942 to 1948 and made almost all his recordings of complete operas (The Snowmaid, Mozart and Salieri, Lakme, The Pearlfishers). His lung was not removed and though he recovered from tuberculosis, it could not function properly. Besides, his voice started to deteriorate and Lemeshev began to drink heavily. He had the ability avoid scandals when drunk, so his reputation was not ...
  • Lemeshev Levko's Song - Rimsky-Korsakov 1948 Nebolsin Sergei Lemeshev: Levko's Song Rare information from younglemeshevist: Unfortunately, there are no sites where you could find detailed information on Lemeshev, especially in English. O.Fyodorova wrote an article, it is not too precise though: Lemeshev was already popular by the time The Musical Story was made (it's here on YT). He sang in the Stanislavsky opera studio in 1924-1926 and then in theaters of Sverdlovsk (now Samara), Harbin (Manchuria) and Tbilisi (Georgian republic). The Musical story and The Leningrad concert hall ( he sang the Duke)1941, were the last films where Lemeshev was perfectly healthy. In October 1941 The Bolshoi company left Moscow, but there was such panic during the evacuation, that many people missed the train. Lemeshev was among them. He spent many hours at the station, the weather was bad and he fell ill with pneumonia complicated with pleurisy . Four months later he fell ill again with the same combination of pneumonia and pleurisy. This resulted in tuberculosis of the right lung. The only effective treatment in those years in the USSR was an artificial pneumothorax (collapsing of the lung). Vishnevskaya refused from pneumothorax and survived because streptomycin appeared in 1948. Lemeshev sang ( 26 performances a month) with one collapsed lung from 1942 to 1948 and made almost all his recordings of complete operas (The Snowmaid, Mozart and Salieri, Lakme, The Pearlfishers). His lung was not removed and though he recovered from ...
  • The Truth About Vaccines Part 2 Vaccines are packed with toxic substances that destroy the immune system and overall health of the body. This following list of common vaccines and their ingredients should shock anyone. The numbers of microbes, antibiotics, chemicals, heavy metals and animal byproducts is staggering. DPT and DTaP - Diphtheria-Tet***-Pertussis diphtheria and tet*** toxoids and acellular pertussis adsorbed, formaldehyde, aluminum phosphate, ammonium sulfate, and thimerosal, washed sheep RBCs (aluminum hydroxide in the DTaP shots) Influenza B Haemophilus influenza Type B, polyribosylribitol phosphate ammonium sulfate HiB Titer - Haemophilus Influenza B haemophilus influenza B, polyribosylribitol phosphate, yeast, ammonium sulfate, thimerosal, and chemically defined yeast-based medium IPOL 3 types of polio viruses neomycin, streptomycin, and polymyxin B formaldehyde, and 2-phenoxyethenol continuous line of monkey kidney cells Attenuvax - Measles measles live virus neomycin sorbitol hydrolized gelatin, chick embryo Biavax - Rubella rubella live virus neomycin sorbitol hydrolized gelatin, human diploid cells from aborted fetal tissue BioThrax - Anthrax nonencapsulated strain of Bacillus anthracis aluminum hydroxide, benzethonium chloride, and formaldehyde Dryvax - Smallpox Live vaccinia virus, with "some microbial contaminants," polymyxcin B sulfate, streptomycin sulfate, chlortetracycline hydrochloride, and neomycin sulfate glycerin, and phenol -a compound obtained by distillation of coal ...
  • Ghost Adventures - Waverly Hills Sanatorium Part 2-5 The Waverly Hills Sanatorium, or Sanitarium, located in southwestern Louisville-Jefferson County, Kentucky, opened in 1910 as a two-story hospital to accommodate 40 to 50 tuberculosis patients. In the early 1900s, Jefferson County, Kentucky was ravaged by an outbreak of the "White Plague" (Tuberculosis). The plague prompted the construction of a new hospital. Although at the time, the hospital was considered the best site for treating the disease, the procedures were primitive and grisly. The doctors experimented, removing organs and using experimental and illegal drugs. Tuberculosis ravaged the mind, and caused some patients to go insane. More than 6000 patients died during the time that the Sanatorium was open. The infamous "body chute" was used for transporting bodies to the graveyard. Doctors thought this would prevent the spread of the disease, and leave the patients from seeing death. The hospital closed in 1962, due to an antibiotic drug called Streptomycin that lowered the need for such a hospital.
  • Ghost Adventures - Waverly Hills Sanatorium Part 5-5 The Waverly Hills Sanatorium, or Sanitarium, located in southwestern Louisville-Jefferson County, Kentucky, opened in 1910 as a two-story hospital to accommodate 40 to 50 tuberculosis patients. In the early 1900s, Jefferson County, Kentucky was ravaged by an outbreak of the "White Plague" (Tuberculosis). The plague prompted the construction of a new hospital. Although at the time, the hospital was considered the best site for treating the disease, the procedures were primitive and grisly. The doctors experimented, removing organs and using experimental and illegal drugs. Tuberculosis ravaged the mind, and caused some patients to go insane. More than 6000 patients died during the time that the Sanatorium was open. The infamous "body chute" was used for transporting bodies to the graveyard. Doctors thought this would prevent the spread of the disease, and leave the patients from seeing death. The hospital closed in 1962, due to an antibiotic drug called Streptomycin that lowered the need for such a hospital.
  • 19. Tuberculosis (II): After Robert Koch Epidemics in Western Society Since 1600 (HIST 234) The cultural transition from the romantic era of consumption to the era of tuberculosis derived not only from the germ theory of disease and the triumph of contagionism over anticontagionism, but also from political considerations. Worries over population decline and growing working-class militancy were aggravated by what now appeared to be a social disease, or a disease of poverty. One of the strategies deployed against the disease was the sanatorium, an institution which was capable both of instructing patients in contagionism and in imposing a practical quarantine. Although the development of effective chemotherapy in the 1940s raised hopes that tuberculosis might be globally eradicated, these have unfortunately proven to be overly optimistic. Factors such as poverty and population displacement continue to favor the disease's spread today, particularly in the Third World. Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: open.yale.edu This course was recorded in Spring 2010.
  • 26. Final Q&A Epidemics in Western Society Since 1600 (HIST 234) Prof. Snowden describes the final exam, and takes questions from students. Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: open.yale.edu This course was recorded in Spring 2010.
  • DOTS CURES TB MENINGITS, 2 OF 2 After taking the first video the mother began speaking of her child's serious condition when she was admitted in the Niloufer hospital. I asked her to describe these things in this second video.The smiles of the mother and child say it all...DOTS is the best thing for a TB patients suffering from any form of TB. I am reminded of the days when, as a house-surgeon I had to go the Pediatric TB ward...about 30 children used to lie in an unconscious state on the beds, barely wincing when given their injections of streptomycin. Their conditions did not improve despite the treatment given to them in those days [1979]. The efficacy of DOTS in bringing about a very quick healing to TB patients needs to be brought into public awareness. The child had been given her BCG, but, perhaps the child did not get immunity and hence has landed into TB of the meninges. With the BCG vaccination being given to new borns all over the country, there has been a dramatic reduction in the numbers of children getting TB of the meninges. The pediatric TB ward in the King George Hospital, Vizag, has been closed down! Because of the susceptibility to get TB of the meninges, if the re are children aged below 6 years in the home of any patient suffering fro smear positive pulmonary tuberculosis, preventive chemotherapy is given to those kids to minimize the risk of their getting affected with TB of the meninges.
  • Tissue culture contamination An intracellular organism that looks like moving black dots is growing inside cultured cells. The black dots will grow to sufficient number to break out of the cell and migrate onto other cells. Could not kill it with antibiotics (gentamycin, ampicillin, streptomycin) we did stain with DAPI which is a nuclear stain and ti show the presents of the neuclear materias in the cytoplasm of the infected cells. Gimsa stain did show a spor like structure which didnt take the dye or even grams stain dye. work still on going to know more about this intracelluar organism
  • GH Grassroots TV 3 Tell me about the kind of skis that you used when you trained. Well they were really a lift of the old Norwegian boards. Mine were 7' 4". I have a pair at home that are the same right now -- also the snowshoes which stand this (gestured) tall, the old shaped snowshoes which are wonderful. --No edges, a double hitch rear throw bindings, you know, that was it. Very heavy. Very heavy -- yeah and so 12:09 So when you're marching along with your 90 lbs and you have your skis over your shoulders and you're on snowshoes, you don't want to sit down —without somebody to help you to get up -- 'cause you're just not gonna make it.. 12:51 So you would use the snowshoes to go uphill and put on the skis on for going down? So, No not at all. Just that we went thru terrain.. They really cooked one up -- They took an azimuth—an azimuth on your compass and that's where you went not left or right you followed the azimuth.you follow the azimuth that's where we went not left or right you followed the azimuth. If you've ever been in the woods, ever in the mountains -- it's really an ultimate test never know what's gonna happen. So we were in the woods. When it called for snowshoes for better work otherwise you were on skis. Did you have skins for the skis? Yeah whatever would be faster—It was time to change and on -- the recon boys decided that. Were you also carrying weapons? I had an M1 -- a heavy mother. That was in addition to the 90 lbs.? No, no --total --we had 90 lbs. 13:30 What else ...
  • Waverly Hills Sanatorium The Waverly Hills Sanatorium is a closed sanatorium located in southwestern Louisville/Jefferson County, Kentucky. It opened in 1910 as a two-story hospital to accommodate 40 to 50 tuberculosis patients. In the early 1900s, Jefferson County was ravaged by an outbreak of tuberculosis (the "White Plague") which prompted the construction of a new hospital. The hospital closed in 1962, due to the antibiotic drug streptomycin that lowered the need for such a hospital. And Hot spot for the paranormal!
  • Unidentified Intra-Cellular Organism 2009102 2 Microscope Camera 400X BF View Some kind of intracellular organism that looks like moving black dots is growing inside cultured cells. The black dots will grow to sufficient number to break out of the cell and migrate onto other cells. Could not kill it with antibiotics (gentamycin, ampicillin, streptomycin) Could anyone identify???
  • HPV Vaccination A Warning for Parents www.educate- educate- news.co.nz DPT — diptheria bacterium, pertussis organisms, tet*** toxoid, sodium chloride, sodium hydroxide, formaldehyde, hydrochloric acid, aluminium and mercury. HiB — Hib saccarides cultured on cow's brains, crm protein, sodium chloride, aluminium hydroxide, mercury. POLIO — 3 types of live polio virus, magnesium chloride, amino acid, polysorbate 80, purified water, neomycin, sulphate, streptomycin, penicillin and monkey kidney cell cultures. MENINGITIS C — meningococcal group C oligosaccharide and corynebacterium, diphteriae crm protein (fails to disclose what vaccine is cultured on), aluminium phosphate, sodium chloride and water. MMR — live measles virus, live mumps virus, live rubella virus, chick embryo, human foetal cells, neomycin, sorbitol, gelatine. HEPATITIS B — Hepatitis B virus gene, aluminium hydroxide, mercury, formaldehyde. For the genetically engineered vaccine: aluminium hydrochloride, sodium chloride and mercury. INFLUENZA — Influenza virus, haemaglutinin and neuraminidase antigens A and B strains, gelatine, mercury, formaldehyde, sodium chloride, mashed chick embryos, neomycin
  • Ghost Adventures - Waverly Hills Sanatorium Part 1-5 The Waverly Hills Sanatorium, or Sanitarium, located in southwestern Louisville-Jefferson County, Kentucky, opened in 1910 as a two-story hospital to accommodate 40 to 50 tuberculosis patients. In the early 1900s, Jefferson County, Kentucky was ravaged by an outbreak of the "White Plague" (Tuberculosis). The plague prompted the construction of a new hospital. Although at the time, the hospital was considered the best site for treating the disease, the procedures were primitive and grisly. The doctors experimented, removing organs and using experimental and illegal drugs. Tuberculosis ravaged the mind, and caused some patients to go insane. More than 6000 patients died during the time that the Sanatorium was open. The infamous "body chute" was used for transporting bodies to the graveyard. Doctors thought this would prevent the spread of the disease, and leave the patients from seeing death. The hospital closed in 1962, due to an antibiotic drug called Streptomycin that lowered the need for such a hospital.
  • Khatami in Tehran University, 20 azar 1386 Tuesday, 20th of Azar 1386, Seyyed Mohammad Khatami went to tehran university (Salon e Chamran e Daneshkade fanni) and spoke infront of his student audience, over 1500 students gathered to hear him. about 3000 students couldn't enter the amphitheater because of lack of space. Student applaused Khatami for several times specially when he critisized actions of Ahmadinejad's state. Even Mr.khatami was impressed by the enormous number of students...
  • Anand Winner of 4 'Filmfare' Awards: Best Picture| Best Actor -- Rajesh Khanna| Best Supporting Actor -- Amitabh Bachchan and Best Story -- Hrishijesh Mukherjee. It also won the National Award for Best Regional Film (Hindi). Anand Saigal (Rajesh Khanna)| an unusual| interesting man| who lived what remained of his life fully| completely. Treating every living moment as magic| every minute a miracle| every hour a gift. A man whose life inspires his friend Dr. Bhaskar Banerjee (Amitabh Bachchan) to write a book that wins the coveted Sarasati Award.A terminally ill cancer patient| Anand walks into Dr Bannerjee's life just when he is about to sink into cynicism. Anand's selfless| boisterous| humerous non-stop chatter changes everyone around him. His attempts to get the tongue tied Dr. Bhaskar to admit his love for Renu| the schoolteacher. His refusal to stay in bed and be treated like a patient. His metaphorical search for Murarilal| his so called long lost friend| his total commitment to live for others and not wallow in self pity. These are very sensitively brought out by one of India's finest directors of Hindi cinema| Hrishikesh Mukherjee. He teams up with Gulzar as lyricist and dialogue writer to give us some of the best lines in Hindi cinema and some hauntingly lovely songs. It plays on your heartstringa| but in the end you will agree| "Anand lives on"
  • John Crofton: The TB trials John Crofton pioneered the randomised controlled trial in a 1948 BMJ paper which looked at the antibiotic streptomycin to treat TB. Now in his 90s, Dr Crofton talks to Colin Blakemore about the importance of randomisation and blinding, and how it has helped to make medicine more evidence based.
  • Rosling's World - a documentary about Hans Rosling Hans Rosling is a professor in international health, who has made an unlikely global success. His Gapminder presentations on global development evokes laughter, rejoice and reflections. In this SVT (Swedish Television) documentary, film maker Pär Fjällström lets Hans Rosling tell the story about his life and what has shaped his world view.
  • Ghost Adventures - Waverly Hills Sanatorium Part 4-4 The Waverly Hills Sanatorium, or Sanitarium, located in southwestern Louisville-Jefferson County, Kentucky, opened in 1910 as a two-story hospital to accommodate 40 to 50 tuberculosis patients. In the early 1900s, Jefferson County, Kentucky was ravaged by an outbreak of the "White Plague" (Tuberculosis). The plague prompted the construction of a new hospital. Although at the time, the hospital was considered the best site for treating the disease, the procedures were primitive and grisly. The doctors experimented, removing organs and using experimental and illegal drugs. Tuberculosis ravaged the mind, and caused some patients to go insane. More than 6000 patients died during the time that the Sanatorium was open. The infamous "body chute" was used for transporting bodies to the graveyard. Doctors thought this would prevent the spread of the disease, and leave the patients from seeing death. The hospital closed in 1962, due to an antibiotic drug called Streptomycin that lowered the need for such a hospital.
  • Ghost Adventures - Waverly Hills Sanatorium Part 3-5 The Waverly Hills Sanatorium, or Sanitarium, located in southwestern Louisville-Jefferson County, Kentucky, opened in 1910 as a two-story hospital to accommodate 40 to 50 tuberculosis patients. In the early 1900s, Jefferson County, Kentucky was ravaged by an outbreak of the "White Plague" (Tuberculosis). The plague prompted the construction of a new hospital. Although at the time, the hospital was considered the best site for treating the disease, the procedures were primitive and grisly. The doctors experimented, removing organs and using experimental and illegal drugs. Tuberculosis ravaged the mind, and caused some patients to go insane. More than 6000 patients died during the time that the Sanatorium was open. The infamous "body chute" was used for transporting bodies to the graveyard. Doctors thought this would prevent the spread of the disease, and leave the patients from seeing death. The hospital closed in 1962, due to an antibiotic drug called Streptomycin that lowered the need for such a hospital.
  • Finding Dr. Schatz: The Discovery of Streptomycin and a Life It Saved A new documentary "Finding Dr. Schatz: The Story of Streptomycin and a Life it Saved" chronicles the relationship between Inge Aerbacher, a Holocaust survivor who contracted Tuberculosis, and Dr. Albert Schatz, co-creator of the miracle drug Streptomycin. Please visit more more information.
  • DNA of Vancomycin Vancomycin is an often forgotten drug which comes from a cousin family of the macrolides and is often thought of from quite a toxic arena similar to streptomycin. In children who had several failures from another antibiotic, in areas hard to reach such as in the ear or sinuses, many consider it a possibility
  • Microbial Observatory Researcher Jo Handelsman runs microbial observatories in Wisconsin and Alaska and studies underground microbes detrimental to healthy soil.
  • Finding Dr. Schatz Trailer A new documentary "Finding Dr. Schatz: The Story of Streptomycin and a Life it Saved" chronicles the relationship between Inge Aerbacher, a Holocaust survivor who contracted Tuberculosis, and Dr. Albert Schatz, co-creator of the miracle drug Streptomycin. Please visit more more information.
  • "Burnsville Today" Sun Current webcast for Wednesday, March 11, 2009, Council talks budget cuts Diving into the budget cuts, the Burnsville City Council sat down at its work session last night to discuss what they want to see happen in the next year. From the discussion the city must now cut $3.5 million from the budget to come out of its deficit. The deficit includes losing $1.5 million in state aid and less interest income and another $1 million in not allowing the 2010 tax levy increase being more than 2 percent. The council wanted staff to reconsider overall city job cuts and reopen contract talks with unions. The council would like to see salaries remain at 2008 levels for the next year at least. For the full article go to . If you were out and about last night you know how nasty the weather got. Here's a video reminder by Lakeville Community Editor Joe Palmersheim. Weather: Tonight: mostly clear, lows 5 to 10 below zero. Tomorrow: mostly sunny with highs around 20. Congrats to Burnsville High School seniors Joseph Lane and Nicholas NaSal and juniors Ashley Santilli and Emily Bostrom who will participate in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in Reno, Nevada, May 10-15. They will be among students from 40 countries showcasing their research and vying for nearly $4 million in prizes and scholarships. Nobel Laureates, leading scientists and engineers from around the world will also attend. Lane and NaSal will present their research: "It's Getting HAWT in Here: An ***ysis of the efficiency of various airfoil designs on a horizontal wind ...
  • Lemeshev Levko, May Night (Rimsky-Korsakov) 1948 Nebolsin Sergei Lemeshev: Act II May Night (Rimsky-Korsakov) Rare information from younglemeshevist: Unfortunately, there are no sites where you could find detailed information on Lemeshev, especially in English. O.Fyodorova wrote an article, it is not too precise though: Lemeshev was already popular by the time The Musical Story was made (it's here on YT). He sang in the Stanislavsky opera studio in 1924-1926 and then in theaters of Sverdlovsk (now Samara), Harbin (Manchuria) and Tbilisi (Georgian republic). The Musical story and The Leningrad concert hall ( he sang the Duke)1941, were the last films where Lemeshev was perfectly healthy. In October 1941 The Bolshoi company left Moscow, but there was such panic during the evacuation, that many people missed the train. Lemeshev was among them. He spent many hours at the station, the weather was bad and he fell ill with pneumonia complicated with pleurisy . Four months later he fell ill again with the same combination of pneumonia and pleurisy. This resulted in tuberculosis of the right lung. The only effective treatment in those years in the USSR was an artificial pneumothorax (collapsing of the lung). Vishnevskaya refused from pneumothorax and survived because streptomycin appeared in 1948. Lemeshev sang ( 26 performances a month) with one collapsed lung from 1942 to 1948 and made almost all his recordings of complete operas (The Snowmaid, Mozart and Salieri, Lakme, The Pearlfishers). His lung was not removed and though ...
  • The Truth About Vaccines Part 1 Vaccines are packed with toxic substances that destroy the immune system and overall health of the body. This following list of common vaccines and their ingredients should shock anyone. The numbers of microbes, antibiotics, chemicals, heavy metals and animal byproducts is staggering. DPT and DTaP - Diphtheria-Tet***-Pertussis diphtheria and tet*** toxoids and acellular pertussis adsorbed, formaldehyde, aluminum phosphate, ammonium sulfate, and thimerosal, washed sheep RBCs (aluminum hydroxide in the DTaP shots) Influenza B Haemophilus influenza Type B, polyribosylribitol phosphate ammonium sulfate HiB Titer - Haemophilus Influenza B haemophilus influenza B, polyribosylribitol phosphate, yeast, ammonium sulfate, thimerosal, and chemically defined yeast-based medium IPOL 3 types of polio viruses neomycin, streptomycin, and polymyxin B formaldehyde, and 2-phenoxyethenol continuous line of monkey kidney cells Attenuvax - Measles measles live virus neomycin sorbitol hydrolized gelatin, chick embryo Biavax - Rubella rubella live virus neomycin sorbitol hydrolized gelatin, human diploid cells from aborted fetal tissue BioThrax - Anthrax nonencapsulated strain of Bacillus anthracis aluminum hydroxide, benzethonium chloride, and formaldehyde Dryvax - Smallpox Live vaccinia virus, with "some microbial contaminants," polymyxcin B sulfate, streptomycin sulfate, chlortetracycline hydrochloride, and neomycin sulfate glycerin, and phenol -a compound obtained by distillation of coal ...