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H5N1 (Free subscription) | 19/11/2008
... be giving readers the impression that we shouldn't be using antibiotics (when needed),” said Dr. David Relman, senior author of the study, which was published Tuesday in the journal PLoS Biology . “But it's the flip side. It's the trade-off part. ... Because we do overuse antibiotics.” Dr. Relman, an infectious-diseases specialist at Stanford University and the Veteran Affairs...
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Globe and Mail (Free subscription) | 19/11/2008
... be giving readers the impression that we shouldn't be using antibiotics (when needed),” said Dr. David Relman, senior author of the study, which was published Tuesday in the journal PLoS Biology.“But it's the flip side. It's the trade-off part. ... Because we do overuse antibiotics.”Dr. Relman, an infectious-diseases specialist at Stanford University and the Veteran Affairs...
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U.S. News (Free subscription) | 19/11/2008
... only modest harm to beneficial bacteria in the body.In this study, Stanford University's Dr. David Relman and colleagues catalogued bacteria in the feces of volunteers being treated with ciprofloxacin and identified more than 5,600 different bacterial species and strains. However, while the patients were taking the antibiotic, the overall abundance of about 30 percent of the bacterial...
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Live Science (Free subscription) | 18/11/2008
... this method often left rarer species out of the count, only capturing their more common brethren. David Relman of the Stanford University School of Medicine and his colleagues used a technique known as pyrosequencing to get a more complete count of the different varieties of colonizing the human colon. Pyrosequencing has been used before to assess the richness of bacterial ecosystems...
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Physorg (Free subscription) | 18/11/2008
... (not to mention that only some varieties of organisms thrive in culture while others perish). David Relman, MD, professor of medicine and of microbiology and immunology, and his associates used a technique know as pyrosequencing, developed outside of Stanford, to get a more complete count of the different varieties of bacteria colonizing the human colon, including myriad strains that...
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Medical News Today (Free subscription) | 18/11/2008
... (not to mention that only some varieties of organisms thrive in culture while others perish). David Relman, MD, professor of medicine and of microbiology and immunology, and his associates used a technique known as pyrosequencing, developed outside of Stanford, to get a more complete count of the different varieties of bacteria colonizing the human colon, including myriad strains...
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Physorg (Free subscription) | 18/11/2008
... investigate ciprofloxacin's effect on health-associated bacteria a team of researchers, led by Dr. David Relman of Stanford University, catalogued types of bacteria present in the faeces of volunteers who were undergoing a course of treatment of ciprofloxacin. The DNA-analysis technique, massively-parallel pyrosequencing, was central to their approach, which is outlined in a companion...
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Science Daily (Free subscription) | 18/11/2008
Sogin, director of the MBL’s Josephine Bay Paul Center, and Susan Huse of the MBL, along with David Relman and Les Dethlefsen of Stanford University, identified pervasive changes in the gut microbial communities of three healthy humans after a five-day course of the antibiotic Ciprofloxacin. Their results are reported in the Nov. 18 issue of PloS Biology.
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The Earth Times Online Newspaper (Free subscription) | 18/11/2008
... (not to mention that only some varieties of organisms thrive in culture while others perish). David Relman, MD, professor of medicine and of microbiology and immunology, and his associates used a technique known as pyrosequencing, developed outside of Stanford, to get a more complete count of the different varieties of bacteria colonizing the human colon, including myriad strains...
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Science Daily (Free subscription) | 17/11/2008
... (not to mention that only some varieties of organisms thrive in culture while others perish).David Relman, MD, professor of medicine and of microbiology and immunology, and his associates used a technique know as pyrosequencing, developed outside of Stanford, to get a more complete count of the different varieties of bacteria colonizing the human colon, including myriad strains that...
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Eurekalert (Free subscription) | 17/11/2008
To investigate ciprofloxacin's effect on health-associated bacteria a team of researchers, led by Dr. David Relman of Stanford University, catalogued types of bacteria present in the faeces of volunteers who were undergoing a course of treatment of ciprofloxacin. The DNA-analysis technique, massively-parallel pyrosequencing, was central to their approach, which is outlined in a companion...