The surgical team as a source of postoperative wound infections caused by Streptococcus pyogenes

scientific article published on March 1997

The surgical team as a source of postoperative wound infections caused by Streptococcus pyogenes is …
instance of (P31):
review articleQ7318358
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/S0195-6701(97)90208-5
P698PubMed publication ID9093919

P2093author name stringNielsen SV
Kolmos HJ
Svendsen RN
P2860cites workScarlet fever and group A streptococcal surgical wound infection traced to an anal carrierQ40751500
Overwhelming postoperative streptococcal infectionQ40873526
Wound Infections Due to Group A Streptococcus Traced to a Vaginal CarrierQ40945678
An outbreak of surgical-wound infections due to group A streptococcus carried on the scalpQ44157024
Hospital Outbreak of Infections with Group A Streptococci Traced to an Asymptomatic Anal CarrierQ54229089
An epidemic of Streptococcus pyogenes puerperal and postoperative sepsis with an unusual carrier site--the anus.Q54643583
Anal carriage as the probable source of a streptococcal epidemic.Q54704619
Recurrent group A streptococcal carriage in a health care worker associated with widely separated nosocomial outbreaksQ68025314
Postoperative group A beta-hemolytic Streptococcus outbreak with the pathogen traced to a member of a healthcare worker's householdQ68651617
Streptococcal wound infections caused by a vaginal carrierQ70232962
AN EPIDEMIC OF STREPTOCOCCAL WOUND INFECTIONSQ78433864
The Problem of the "Dangerous Carrier" of Hemolytic Streptococci: II. Spread of Infection by Individuals with Strongly Positive Nose Cultures who Expelled Large Numbers of Hemolytic StreptococciQ82054510
P433issue3
P921main subjectStreptococcus pyogenesQ131271
P304page(s)207-214
P577publication date1997-03-01
P1433published inJournal of Hospital InfectionQ15746468
P1476titleThe surgical team as a source of postoperative wound infections caused by Streptococcus pyogenes
P478volume35

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q44067450A Streptococcus pyogenes outbreak caused by an unusual serotype of low virulence: the value of typing techniques in outbreak investigations
Q43230459Case cluster of necrotizing fasciitis and cellulitis associated with vein sclerotherapy
Q91777916Colonization of β-hemolytic streptococci in patients with erysipelas-a prospective study
Q34041494Genetic diversity among type emm28 group A Streptococcus strains causing invasive infections and pharyngitis
Q40264443Hand Contamination, Cross-Transmission, and Risk-Associated Behaviors: An Observational Study of Team Members in ORs.
Q51704941Health service careers for people with cystic fibrosis.
Q50139805Interaction between the microbiology laboratory and clinician: what the microbiologist can provide
Q37212783Investigating incidence of bacterial and fungal contamination in shared cosmetic kits available in the women beauty salons
Q54659145Molecular characterization of Streptococcus pyogenes isolates to investigate an outbreak of puerperal sepsis.
Q30248524Outbreaks in Health Care Settings
Q51705729Population-based surveillance for postpartum invasive group a streptococcus infections, 1995-2000.
Q57661150Prevention of Invasive Group A Streptococcal Disease among Household Contacts of Case Patients and among Postpartum and Postsurgical Patients: Recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Q36470673Provider knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding obstetric and postsurgical gynecologic infections due to group A Streptococcus and other infectious agents
Q57664055Risks Caused by Airborne Microbes in Hospitals - Source Control is Important
Q40670301Role of the clinical microbiology laboratory in infection control--a Danish perspective
Q44574402The wound care team: a new source of group a streptococcal nosocomial transmission
Q34007240Thematic review series: skin lipids. Antimicrobial lipids at the skin surface
Q83989078[Responsibility of surgeons for surgical site infections]

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