Tuberculosis bacteria rely on a family of genes that help them survive the challenging journey from one person's lungs to ...
Tuberculosis lives and thrives in the lungs. When the bacteria that cause the disease are coughed into the air, they are ...
Landmark study shows treating both partners for bacterial vaginosis improves outcomes, but experts suggest there may be more to the story.
Study by MIT and others identifies genes essential for tuberculosis bacterium’s survival during airborne transmission.
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is not classified as a sexually transmitted infection, but the results of a new study could change ...
New research published in The New England Journal of Medicine reveals bacterial vaginosis is a sexually transmitted disease, advocating for joint treatment of both male and female partners to ...
Health experts say an Australian study linking sexual activity to an infection that 1 in 3 U.S. women contract has provided a ...
A new on-site DNA sequencing method that can deliver bacterial infection diagnoses in 2 days could be rolled out nationwide ...
Bacterial vaginosis affects one in three women and often comes back after treatment, but it can be completely wiped out in ...
Bacterial foodborne outbreaks in the U.S. increased while viral outbreaks declined between 2014 and 2022, with environmental ...
One in three women experience bacterial vaginosis, but a breakthrough Australian study has found that treating male sexual ...
Treatment for two rather than one may help prevent another bout of a common and unpleasant vaginal syndrome. For many women who develop bacterial vaginosis, the syndrome returns weeks or months ...