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Clinton K. Murray

Researcher at San Antonio Military Medical Center

Publications -  273
Citations -  13140

Clinton K. Murray is an academic researcher from San Antonio Military Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Acinetobacter baumannii. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 267 publications receiving 11786 citations. Previous affiliations of Clinton K. Murray include United States Department of the Army & Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.

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Detection of Simulated Candidemia by the BACTEC 9240 System with Plus Aerobic/F and Anaerobic/F Blood Culture Bottles

TL;DR: The BACTEC 9240 system detected growth of most Candida isolates; however, the delayed time to detection of C. glabrata is clinically significant, and terminal subcultures may be helpful in certain situations.
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Infection After Orthopaedic Trauma: Prevention and Treatment.

TL;DR: Clinical practice guidelines to address infection prevention after combat trauma (including extremity infection) were developed in 2007 and revised in 2011, with endorsement from the Surgical Infection Society and the Infectious Disease Society of America, Nevertheless, significant challenges remain.
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Recovery of multidrug-resistant bacteria from combat personnel evacuated from Iraq and Afghanistan at a single military treatment facility.

TL;DR: Despite aggressive infection control procedures, there is continued nosocomial transmission within the facility and increasing antimicrobial resistance in some pathogens, suggesting novel techniques are needed to control the impact of MDR bacteria in medical facilities.
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Co-infection with malaria and leptospirosis.

TL;DR: Two cases of malaria are reported from an area of Thailand on the Thailand-Myanmar border with compelling serologic evidence of simultaneous acute leptospirosis, and management of dual infections is complicated by their similar clinical presentations.
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A comparative study of leptospirosis and dengue in Thai children.

TL;DR: Unrecognized leptospirosis can be a significant cause of “dengue-like” febrile illness in children and an enhanced ability to discriminate between leptosphereirosis and dengue early in illness will help guide the appropriate use of healthcare resources in often resource-limited settings.