May 2018 Clinical Case Vid. 5
Video 5. Axial CT of the brain when the patient had meningitis showing fluid in the mastoid on the right side (left side of images). (Source: The Hearing Journal - Video)
Source: The Hearing Journal - Video - May 25, 2018 Category: Audiology Source Type: video

April 2018 Clinical Case Vid. 5
Video 5. Axial CT of the brain when the patient had meningitis showing fluid in the mastoid on the right side (left side of images). (Source: The Hearing Journal - Video)
Source: The Hearing Journal - Video - April 11, 2018 Category: Audiology Source Type: video

April 2018 Clinical Case Vid. 6
Video 6. Axial T2-weighted MRI of the brain showing fluid in the right mastoid (left side of images) at the time of the meningitis. (Source: The Hearing Journal - Video)
Source: The Hearing Journal - Video - April 11, 2018 Category: Audiology Source Type: video

April 2018 Clinical Case Vid. 5
Video 5. Axial CT of the brain when the patient had meningitis showing fluid in the mastoid on the right side (left side of images). (Source: The Hearing Journal - Video)
Source: The Hearing Journal - Video - April 10, 2018 Category: Audiology Source Type: video

April 2018 Clinical Case Vid. 6
Video 6. Axial T2-weighted MRI of the brain showing fluid in the right mastoid (left side of images) at the time of the meningitis. (Source: The Hearing Journal - Video)
Source: The Hearing Journal - Video - April 10, 2018 Category: Audiology Source Type: video

Contemporary Clinical Medicine: Great Teachers: Meningococcus Group B Meningitis: An Avoidable Problem
Presented by: Rachel Schneerson, MD, Albert Lasker Clinical Medical Research Awardee (1996), NIHCategory: Clinical Center Grand RoundsAired date: 01/08/2014 (Source: Videocast - All Events)
Source: Videocast - All Events - January 8, 2014 Category: Journals (General) Tags: Past Events Source Type: video

2013 Kinyoun Lecture - Thoughts on the Origin of Microbial Virulence
The worlds inside and outside our bodies teem with microorganisms, but most don’t make us sick. Fungi in particular seem to leave mammals alone. Of the 1.5 million known fungal species, only a dozen or so are relatively common human pathogens, while insects and plants are frequent fungal targets. Why the difference? Arturo Casadevall, M.D., Ph.D., will address that question—and the intriguing possibility that the demise of dinosaurs and the rise of mammals were linked by differing susceptibility to fungal diseases—in the 2013 Joseph J. Kinyoun Memorial Lecture. Casadevall is Professor and Chair of the Department of...
Source: Videocast - All Events - October 21, 2013 Category: Journals (General) Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

Thoughts on the Origin of Microbial Virulence
2013 Kinyoun Lecture The worlds inside and outside our bodies teem with microorganisms, but most don’t make us sick. Fungi in particular seem to leave mammals alone. Of the 1.5 million known fungal species, only a dozen or so are relatively common human pathogens, while insects and plants are frequent fungal targets. Why the difference? Arturo Casadevall, M.D., Ph.D., will address that question—and the intriguing possibility that the demise of dinosaurs and the rise of mammals were linked by differing susceptibility to fungal diseases—in the 2013 Joseph J. Kinyoun Memorial Lecture. Casadevall is Professor and Chai...
Source: Videocast - All Events - September 18, 2013 Category: Journals (General) Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video