Facets
Browse across eight MeSH (opens in new tab) facets — era, geography, science, specialty, technology, history, culture, and reference. Select one tag per group; counts update across the others.
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Geography
Specialties & Disease
- Anatomy & Pathology 9
- Cardiology & Blood 94
- Neurology & Psychiatry 78
- Obstetrics & Reproductive 17
- Infectious Disease (General) 5
- Surgery & Anesthesia 52
- Public Health 101
- Immunology & Dermatology 60
- General Clinical Medicine 46
- Military Medicine 16
- Psychology 9
- Alternative & Fringe Medicine 100
- Pediatrics 6
- Ophthalmology & Vision 5
- ENT & Hearing 3
- Urology & Nephrology 3
- Gastroenterology & Hepatology 10
- Pulmonary & Respiratory 9
- Rheumatology, Rehab & Pain 29
- Internal, Emergency & Geriatric 4
- Veterinary Medicine 8
- Epidemiology & Demography 13
- Physiology & Embryology 41
- Dentistry 7
- Plagues & Epidemics 92
- Microbiology & Virology 82
Social & Historical Studies
Institutions & Culture
Reference & Scholarly Works
Drugs & Technology
5 entries match Infectious Disease (General) [C01] · Pharmacology & Therapeutics [D01 / E02]
1889 CE
#10786
Antibiose et symbiose.
Villemin coined the term antibiosis and advanced the term from an evolutionary viewpoint. Though he presented the concept Villemin did not apply this concept to fight disease. (Thanks to Juan Weiss for this reference.)
2008 CE
#9683
Antimicrobial drugs: Chronicle of a twentieth century medical triumph.
Concerns the history of all anti-infectives, including antibacterial, antiviral, antifungal, antiprotozoal and anthelminthic agents.
1762 CE
#11523
The medical works of Richard Mead.
1822 CE
#11738
The miscellaneous tracts of the late William Withering. To which is prefixed a memoir of his life, character and writings. 2 vols.
Withering's collected works, with the exception of his A botanical arrangement of all the the vegetables naturally growing in the Great Britain. Includes the second edition of his monograph on the foxglove. Digital fa…
1886 CE
#2503.1
Ueber die Mosaikkrankheit des Tabaks.
Mayer was first to describe and name tobacco mosaic disease and to demonstrate its infectious nature, that it could be transferred between plants, similar to bacterial infections. Translation in Phytopathological Clas…