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. 1977 Oct;52(10):794–796. doi: 10.1136/adc.52.10.794

Candida species and yeasts in mouths of infants from a special care unit of a maternity hospital.

K M Lay, C Russel
PMCID: PMC1544808  PMID: 931427

Abstract

A group of 99 babies born in hospital and subsequently transferred to the special care unit were examined for the presence of candidas orally. The rate of isolation rose from 6% neonatally to 53% on day 14 of life. Among infants who did not harbour the organisms when discharged from hospital, colonization rapidly took place so that 79% did so at 4 weeks of age, after which the rate fell to 50% at one year of age. The low incidence of clinical candidosis suggests that in these babies as in other groups C. albicans is normally a harmless commensal.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

  1. Blaschke-Hellmessen R., Hinkel G. K., Kintzel H. W. Zum problem des Candida-Hospitalismus bei Frühgeborenen. Dermatol Monatsschr. 1973 Apr;159(4):403–409. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
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