Neonatal sepsis is a type of neonatal infection which specifically refers to the presence of a bacterial blood stream infection (BSI) in a newborn baby such as pneumonia, meningitis, gastroenteritis or pyelonephritis in fever setting. Older textbooks may refer to "sepsis neonatorum" as neonatal sepsis. Criteria for hemodynamic instability or respiratory failure are not clinically helpful, since such signs do not always occur in neonates before death is unavoidable and unpreventable. Neonatal sepsis is divided into two categories: sepsis late onset (LOS) and sepsis early onset (EOS). EOS refers to sepsis that occurs during the first 7 days of life while LOS refers to sepsis presentation after 7 days.
Editor’s Note: Human Genetics & Embryology
Editor’s Note: Human Genetics & Embryology
Research Article: Human Genetics & Embryology
Research Article: Human Genetics & Embryology
Research Article: Human Genetics & Embryology
Research Article: Human Genetics & Embryology
Review Article: Human Genetics & Embryology
Review Article: Human Genetics & Embryology
Editorial: Human Genetics & Embryology
Editorial: Human Genetics & Embryology
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Metabolomics:Open Access
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Metabolomics:Open Access
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Journal of Cytology & Histology
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Journal of Cytology & Histology
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Metabolomics:Open Access
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Metabolomics:Open Access
Accepted Abstracts: Metabolomics:Open Access
Accepted Abstracts: Metabolomics:Open Access
Accepted Abstracts: Metabolomics:Open Access
Accepted Abstracts: Metabolomics:Open Access
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