Pages that link to "Q26801645"
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The following pages link to Quantity and Quality of Inhaled Dose Predicts Immunopathology in Tuberculosis (Q26801645):
Displaying 16 items.
- (Q28397344) (redirect page) (← links)
- Cough Aerosols of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the Prediction of Incident Tuberculosis Disease in Household Contacts. (Q37220214) (← links)
- Mechanisms of mycobacterial transmission: how does Mycobacterium tuberculosis enter and escape from the human host (Q38796756) (← links)
- Editorial: Causes for Increased Susceptibility to Mycobacterium tuberculosis - A Close View of the Immune System (Q43204990) (← links)
- Corrigendum: Quantity and Quality of Inhaled Dose Predicts Immunopathology in Tuberculosis (Q43235575) (← links)
- Drivers of Tuberculosis Transmission (Q46679994) (← links)
- Research Roadmap for Tuberculosis Transmission Science: Where Do We Go From Here and How Will We Know When We're There? (Q47286468) (← links)
- Intensity of exposure to pulmonary tuberculosis determines risk of tuberculosis infection and disease. (Q47643684) (← links)
- Impact of effective contact rate and post treatment immune status on population tuberculosis infection and disease using a mathematical model (Q57263232) (← links)
- Cough-aerosol cultures of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the prediction of outcomes after exposure. A household contact study in Brazil (Q58106682) (← links)
- A new mathematical model to identify contacts with recent and remote latent tuberculosis. (Q64905185) (← links)
- Identification of subclinical tuberculosis in household contacts using exposure scores and contact investigations (Q89471033) (← links)
- Exhaled Mycobacterium tuberculosis output and detection of subclinical disease by face-mask sampling: prospective observational studies (Q89836161) (← links)
- Origin of tuberculosis in the Paleolithic predicts unprecedented population growth and female resistance (Q92491498) (← links)
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection of host cells in space and time (Q92649692) (← links)
- A virtual host model of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection identifies early immune events as predictive of infection outcomes (Q111441930) (← links)