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James W. Bass

Researcher at Tripler Army Medical Center

Publications -  133
Citations -  5087

James W. Bass is an academic researcher from Tripler Army Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Penicillin & Pharyngitis. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 133 publications receiving 4990 citations. Previous affiliations of James W. Bass include University of Hawaii & University of Hawaii at Manoa.

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Practice guideline for the management of infants and children 0 to 36 months of age with fever without source

TL;DR: These guidelines do not eliminate all risk or strictly confine antibiotic treatment to children likely to have occult bacteremia and Physicians may individualize therapy based on clinical circumstances or adopt a variation of these guidelines based on a different interpretation of the evidence.
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Prospective randomized double blind placebo-controlled evaluation of azithromycin for treatment of cat-scratch disease.

TL;DR: Treatment of patients with typical cat-scratch disease with oral azithromycin for five days affords significant clinical benefit as measured by total decrease in lymph node volume within the first month of treatment.
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Practice Guideline for the Management of Infants and Children 0 to 36 Months of Age With Fever Without Source

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed guidelines for the care of infants and children from birth to 36 months of age with fever without source, and used a comprehensive literature search to identify all publications pertinent to the management of the febrile child.
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The expanding spectrum of Bartonella infections : II. Cat scratch disease.

TL;DR: Clinical response to treatment with drugs that are effective in vitro against these organisms has usually been dramatic and these agents not only appear to provide the most dramatic treatment response in patients with BA, BP and PRFB and other manifestations of B. elizabethae infections in humans, they appear to be the most promising agents for treatment of persons with both typical and atypical CSD.
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Decreased Incidence of Urinary Tract Infections in Circumcised Male Infants

TL;DR: The results of a study documenting the incidence of unnary tract infection during the first year of life in a large cohort of infants born at this institution over an 18-month period are reported.