PMID: 6985031Jan 1, 1982Paper

Gardnerella vaginalis (hemophilus vaginalis), an unusual cause of peritonitis in C.A.P.D

Clinical and Experimental Dialysis and Apheresis
M De PaepeG Verschraegen

Abstract

Gardnerella vaginalis is usually associated with nonspecific bacterial vaginitis. This paper presents a CAPD patiënt with peritonitis due to G. vaginalis. The infection route remained speculative. Treatment with gentamicin was not successful while the clinical signs of peritonitis disappeared within 24 hours after starting cefazolin.

References

Jun 29, 1978·The New England Journal of Medicine·T A PheiferK K Holmes
Aug 1, 1979·Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy·L R McCarthyE G Smith
Dec 15, 1974·American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology·G R Monif, H Baer
Jan 1, 1969·The American Journal of Medicine·E B Rotheram, S F Schick
Jan 1, 1980·Annals of Internal Medicine·J RubinK D Nolph
Jun 1, 1980·American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology·H L Gardner
Jan 1, 1981·Archives of Internal Medicine·D ArfaniaJ Rubin

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Citations

Aug 29, 2006·The Journal of Infection·Mayurika Ghosh, Jennifer Eras
Sep 1, 1991·American Journal of Kidney Diseases : the Official Journal of the National Kidney Foundation·R A Rodby, E J Glick
Jan 1, 1992·Clinical Microbiology Reviews·A von Graevenitz, D Amsterdam

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