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1 tal of 531 serum samples were evaluated (264 blood culture positive; 267 blood culture negative).
2 1 prospectively identified patients with PB (blood cultures positive after > or =7 days of therapy) a
3                              Chart review of blood cultures positive after 4 days (96 h) rarely had a
4 .5; p < .01) and TB qPCR-positivity, whether blood culture-positive (aOR 4.6, 95% CI, 2.1-10.0; p < .
5 hose recognized by sera from acute/subacute, blood culture-positive brucellosis patients but also rec
6  survey dates to caregivers of patients with blood culture positive cases at enrollment and 6 weeks l
7  Possible pathogens were detected in 4 of 66 blood culture-positive cases.
8 yocardium, liver, and kidney tissues of both blood culture-positive cats and blood culture-negative c
9 B cases were grouped as 1) Group 1- neonatal blood culture-positive EONS (n=6).
10  their urine were slightly more likely to be blood culture positive for enteric fever; however, the e
11              Eligibility criteria included a blood culture positive for growth of gram-negative bacte
12         Patients were included if they had a blood culture positive for MSSA and received definitive
13          Furthermore, a 72-hour surveillance blood culture positive for organisms was associated with
14 CoV-2 had urine infection due to E. coli and blood culture positive for S. viridans.
15  hospitalized patients with septic shock and blood cultures positive for Candida species was conducte
16            An evaluation was performed on 95 blood cultures positive for Candida spp. to determine th
17 vention for adult hospitalized patients with blood cultures positive for CoNS.
18 e increased IgG antibody titers in serum and blood cultures positive for E. canis occurred as early a
19 ional cohort study evaluated inpatients with blood cultures positive for GPC in the pre-PCR (15 Janua
20                      Clinical trials with 87 blood cultures positive for GPCC correctly identified 36
21 assay that identifies isolates directly from blood cultures positive for Gram-negative bacilli (GNB).
22                                          For blood cultures positive for gram-positive cocci, 24 to 4
23                               Eighteen of 19 blood cultures positive for H. capsulatum grew in both I
24 rs to determine the number of single-patient blood cultures positive for MRSA and methicillin-suscept
25 spectively compared two patient cohorts with blood cultures positive for on-panel Gram-negative organ
26                 Other complications included blood cultures positive for organisms (1.5%), thrombus (
27 ccus aureus, 15 of 126 (11.9%) patients with blood cultures positive for other pathogens, 37 of 669 (
28 nic in Rochester, MN, from 2002 to 2012 with blood cultures positive for Rothia.
29 d HO-SAB was collected (defined as 1 or more blood cultures positive for S. aureus taken from a patie
30      In a single-center retrospective study, blood cultures positive for S. aureus were obtained from
31 tment on day 8; microbiological failure (ie, blood cultures positive for Salmonella enterica serotype
32                                          For blood cultures positive for Staphylococcus aureus (n = 7
33 s occurred in 46 of 60 (76.7%) patients with blood cultures positive for Staphylococcus aureus, 15 of
34  healthy blood donors and from patients with blood cultures positive for yeast or bacteria.
35         Importantly, all (8/8) patients with blood culture-positive infective endocarditis were deter
36 n urine from 263 adult patients with proven (blood culture-positive) invasive pneumococcal disease an
37 AT assay accurately distinguished Australian blood culture positive melioidosis patients from Austral
38 f clinically septic patients who were either blood culture positive or repeatedly culture negative.
39                       Six clinically septic, blood culture-positive or repeatedly culture-negative pa
40     Neurolisteriosis mortality was higher in blood-culture positive patients (OR 3.67 [1.60-8.40], p=
41                Urine Xpert, urine LAM and TB-blood-culture positive patients clustered similarly on t
42 nomannan (LAM) combined identified 88% of TB blood-culture-positive patients, including 9/9 who died
43 ents had T2Candida panel negative and myco/f blood culture positive results.
44 crotising enterocolitis (Bell stage 2 or 3), blood culture positive sepsis more than 72 h after birth
45                             Two infants with blood culture positive sepsis were excluded, and the dat
46 dels, compared with culture-negative sepsis, blood culture-positive sepsis (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]
47       Compared with culture-negative sepsis, blood culture-positive sepsis and nonblood culture-posit
48                                The number of blood culture-positive sepsis episodes was 21,167 (14%)
49 th community-onset sepsis, the prevalence of blood culture-positive sepsis was 14%.
50                          Among patients with blood culture-positive sepsis, Gram-negative rods were i
51 onblood culture-positive sepsis, and 17% for blood culture-positive sepsis.
52                       The majority (>90%) of blood culture-positive typhoid cases remain unobserved i