09 May 2012

Breast infection - Mastitis




84 Free full text published articles



  1. Lactational mastitis and breast abscess - diagnosis and management in general practice.
  2. Successfully treated Mycobacterium abscessus mastitis: a rare cause of breast masses.
  3. Topical steroids to treat granulomatous mastitis: a case report.
  4. Molecular epidemiology of mastitis pathogens of dairy cattle and comparative relevance to humans.
  5. Idiopathic granulomatous mastitis associated with corynebacterium sp. Infection.
  6. Staphylococcal bovine mastitis in France: enterotoxins, resistance and the human Geraldine methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus clone.
  7. Vitamin supplementation increases risk of subclinical mastitis in HIV-infected women.
  8. Genetic analyses of HIV-1 env sequences demonstrate limited compartmentalization in breast milk and suggest viral replication within the breast that increases with mastitis.
  9. Outcomes of teaching baccalaureate nursing students about mastitis utilizing a multimodal teaching tool.
  10. Treatment of infectious mastitis during lactation: antibiotics versus oral administration of Lactobacilli isolated from breast milk.
  11. Associations between breast milk viral load, mastitis, exclusive breast-feeding, and postnatal transmission of HIV.
  12. Idiopathic granulomatous mastitis: case reports and review of literature.
  13. Idiopathic granulomatous mastitis in Hispanic women - Indiana, 2006-2008.
  14. First description of NOD2 variant associated with defective neutrophil responses in a woman with granulomatous mastitis related to corynebacteria.
  15. Granulomatous lobular mastitis: imaging, diagnosis, and treatment.
  16. Bayesian analysis of a mastitis control plan to investigate the influence of veterinary prior beliefs on clinical interpretation.
  17. Is granulomatous mastitis a localized form of hidradenitis suppurativa?
  18. Staphylococcus epidermidis strains isolated from breast milk of women suffering infectious mastitis: potential virulence traits and resistance to antibiotics.
  19. Subclinical mastitis may not reduce breastmilk intake during established lactation.
  20. Information from your family doctor. Mastitis: what you should know.
  21. Management of mastitis in breastfeeding women.
  22. Horizontal gene transfers link a human MRSA pathogen to contagious bovine mastitis bacteria.
  23. Cytomegalovirus and Epstein-Barr virus in breast milk are associated with HIV-1 shedding but not with mastitis.
  24. Oral administration of Lactobacillus strains isolated from breast milk as an alternative for the treatment of infectious mastitis during lactation.
  25. PCR-DGGE assessment of the bacterial diversity of breast milk in women with lactational infectious mastitis.
  26. Laboratory indicators of mastitis are not associated with elevated HIV-1 DNA loads or predictive of HIV-1 RNA loads in breast milk.
  27. Idiopathic granulomatous mastitis lesion mimicking inflammatory breast cancer.
  28. Postpartum mastitis and community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
  29. A descriptive study of mastitis in Australian breastfeeding women: incidence and determinants.
  30. Corynebacterium accolens isolated from breast abscess: possible association with granulomatous mastitis.
  31. A qualitative investigation into knowledge, beliefs, and practices surrounding mastitis in sub-Saharan Africa: what implications for vertical transmission of HIV?
  32. Granulomatous mastitis including breast tuberculosis and idiopathic lobular granulomatous mastitis.
  33. A case-control study of mastitis: nasal carriage of Staphylococcus aureus.
  34. Women's experience of lactational mastitis--I have never felt worse.
  35. Tuberculous mastitis: a report of two cases in elderly females.
  36. Necrotizing mastitis caused by calciphylaxis.
  37. Radiologic and clinical features of idiopathic granulomatous lobular mastitis mimicking advanced breast cancer.
  38. Studies on mastitis, milk quality and health risks associated with consumption of milk from pastoral herds in Dodoma and Morogoro regions, Tanzania.
  39. Idiopathic granulomatous mastitis: a case successfully treated with a minimum dose of a steroid.
  40. Cat scratch disease presenting as breast mastitis.
  41. Rheumatologists and breasts: immunosuppressive therapy for granulomatous mastitis.
  42. Epidemiological and molecular evidence of a monophyletic infection with Staphylococcus aureus causing a purulent dermatitis in a dairy farmer and multiple cases of mastitis in his cows.
  43. Image of the month. Silicone mastitis with abscess.
  44. The challenge of mastitis.
  45. Characterization of a vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecalis (VREF) isolate from a dog with mastitis: further evidence of a clonal lineage of VREF in New Zealand.
  46. Fine needle aspiration cytology of granulomatous mastitis.
  47. JAMA patient page. Mastitis.
  48. Lymphocytic mastitis and diabetic mastopathy: a molecular, immunophenotypic, and clinicopathologic evaluation of 11 cases.
  49. Corynebacterium species isolated from patients with mastitis.
  50. Lupus mastitis: radiologic and pathologic features.
  51. Mastitis while breastfeeding: old theories and new evidence.
  52. Lactation mastitis: occurrence and medical management among 946 breastfeeding women in the United States.
  53. Mastitis due to Mycobacterium abscessus after body piercing.
  54. Herpes simplex virus mastitis: clinical and imaging findings.
  55. Cytotoxic activity of coagulase-negative staphylococci in bovine mastitis.
  56. Mastitis and human immunodeficiency virus transmission: chemokines and maternal monocytes.
  57. Selective recruitment of T-cell subsets to the udder during staphylococcal and streptococcal mastitis: analysis of lymphocyte subsets and adhesion molecule expression.
  58. Mastitis and immunological factors in breast milk of lactating women in Malawi.
  59. Granulomatous mastitis: mammographic and sonographic appearances.
  60. Human immunodeficiency virus load in breast milk, mastitis, and mother-to-child transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1.
  61. Molecular analysis of Pseudomonas aeruginosa: epidemiological investigation of mastitis outbreaks in Irish dairy herds.
  62. Breastfeeding and mastitis.
  63. Idiopathic granulomatous mastitis: case report and review of the literature.
  64. Smoking and periductal mastitis.
  65. A haemagglutinating adhesin of group B streptococci isolated from cases of bovine mastitis mediates adherence to HeLa cells.
  66. A case of gonococcal mastitis in a male.
  67. Activity of pirlimycin against pathogens from cows with mastitis and recommendations for disk diffusion tests.
  68. Stripping out pus in lactational mastitis: a means of preventing breast abscess.
  69. Tuberculous mastitis.
  70. Milk transfer of phenoxymethylpenicillin during puerperal mastitis.
  71. Acute mastitis; a novel presentation of relapsing polychondritis.
  72. Granulomatous mastitis--a rare cause of erythema nodosum.
  73. Granulomatous lobular mastitis.
  74. IgA nephropathy associated with mastitis and haematuria.
  75. Periductal mastitis and mammary duct ectasia in a male.
  76. Postpartum lobular granulomatous mastitis.
  77. Granulomatous mastitis: a report of seven cases.
  78. Editorial: Puerperal mastitis.
  79. Production of mastitis in mice with human and bovine ureaplasmas (T-mycoplasmas).
  80. Isolation of T-mycoplasmas from goats, and the production of subclinical mastitis in goats by the intramammary inoculation of human T-mycoplasmas.
  81. The production of mastitis in cows by the intramammary inoculation of T-mycoplasmas.
  82. The problem of "chronic mastitis" with epitheliosis.
  83. Silicone mastitis in "topless" waitresses and some other varieties of foreign-body mastitis.
  84. Mastitis in the male--a rare complication of mumps.

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