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Results 101 - 110 of 116 for Acute otitis media
  • Health - 27 Feb 2019
    A stuffy nose is also called nasal congestion. It is the result of swelling and inflammation of the nasal mucosa and underlying tissues, along with the blood vessels that network beneath them. They...
  • Health - 26 Feb 2019
    Seventh cranial nerve (facial nerve) passes through a portion of temporal bone known as the facial canal. Inflammation of at the part of the nerve termed geniculate ganglion (a group of fibers and...
  • Health - 26 Feb 2019
    Xylitol is a non-sugar sweetener extracted from the birch tree. It is a five-carbon polyol that has effectively demonstrated itself to be cariogenic, by its action of neutralizing plaque acidity on...
  • News - 1 Mar 2013
    Amoxicillin is a broad spectrum penicillin, and in the UK is one of the most frequently used antibiotics. It is commonly used either on its own or, where there are particular concerns about...
  • News - 29 Aug 2011
    The 2011 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO of the American Academy of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery Foundation (AAO-HNSF), the largest meeting of ear, nose, and throat doctors in the world, will...
  • News - 31 Dec 2009
    Pfizer Inc. announced today that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not yet completed its review of the Biologics License Application (BLA) for Prevnar 13™, (Pneumococcal 13-valent...
  • News - 11 Dec 2009
    The European Commission has granted Pfizer Inc. a European marketing authorization for its pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, Prevenar 13 (Pneumococcal Polysaccharide Conjugate Vaccine [13-valent,...
  • Health - 8 Jun 2023
    Tinnitus or “ringing of the ears” is a symptom of an underlying condition rather than a disease in itself.
  • Health - 29 May 2023
    Scarlet fever is essentially a bacterial infection that leads to a typical pink-red rash. It is caused by an organism Streptococcus and is seen rarely in developed countries like United Kingdom these...
  • Health - 29 May 2023
    Scarlet fever is usually of mild intensity and goes away on its own in about a week without treatment. Scarlet fever is caused by Group A beta haemolytic Streptococci. In mild cases this might not...

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