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  • Book
    edited by Alioscka A. Sousa, Michael J. Kruhlak.
    Contents:
    Introduction : nanoimaging techniques in biology / Alioscka A. Sousa and Michael J. Kruhlak
    Live-cell imaging of vesicle trafficking and divalent metal ions by total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy / Merewyn K. Loder, Takashi Tsuboi, and Guy A. Rutter
    4Pi microscopy / Roman Schmidt, Johann Engelhardt, and Marion Lang
    Fluorescence in situ hybridization applications for super-resolution 3D structured illumination microscopy / Yolanda Markaki [and others]
    Two-color STED imaging of synapses in living brain slices / Jan Tonnesen and U. Valentin Nagerl
    Super-resolution imaging by localization microscopy / Dylan M. Owen [and others]
    High-content super-resolution imaging of live cell by uPAINT / Gregory Giannone [and others]
    Super-resolution fluorescence imaging with blink microscopy / Christian Steinhauer, Michelle S. Itano, and Philip Tinnefeld
    Photoswitchable fluorophores for single-molecule localization microscopy / Kieran Finan, Benjamin Flottmann, and Mike Heilemann
    Single-molecule tracking of mRNA in living cells / Mai Yamagishi, Yoshitaka Shirasaki, and Takashi Funatsu
    Semiautomatic, high-throughput, high-resolution protocol for three-dimensional reconstruction of single particles in electron microscopy / Carlos Oscar Sorzano [and others]
    Mass mapping of amyloid fibrils in the electron microscope using STEM imaging / Alioscka A. Sousa and Richard D. Leapman
    Elemental mapping by electron energy loss spectroscopy in biology / Maria A. Aronova and Richard D. Leapman
    Cellular nanoimaging by cryo electron tomography / Roman I. Koning and Abraham J. Koster
    Large-volume reconstruction of brain tissue from high-resolution serial section images acquired by SEM-based scanning transmission electron microscopy / Masaaki Kuwajima, John M. Mendenhall, and Kristen M. Harris
    3D imaging of cells and tissues by focused ion beam/ scanning electron microscopy (FIB/SEM) / Damjana Drobne
    Preparation of gold nanocluster bioconjugates for electron microscopy / Christine L. Heinecke and Christopher J. Ackerson
    Atomic force microscopy imaging of macromolecular complexes / Sergio Santos, Daniel Billingsley, and Neil Thomson
    Imaging of transmembrane proteins directly incorporated within supported lipid bilayers using atomic force microscopy / Daniel Levy and Pierre-Emmanuel Milhiet
    Functional AFM imaging of cellular membranes using functionalized tips / Lilia A. Chtcheglova and Peter Hinterdorfer
    Near-field scanning optical microscopy for high-resolution membrane studies / Heath A. Huckabay [and others]
    Correlative fluorescence and EFTEM imaging of the organized components of the mammalian nucleus / Michael J. Kruhlak
    High data output method for 3-D correlative light-electron microscopy using ultrathin cryosections / Katia Cortese [and others]
    Correlative optical and scanning probe microscopies for mapping interactions at membranes / Christopher M. Yip
    Nanoimaging cells using soft x-ray tomography / Dilworth Y. Parkinson [and others]
    Secondary ion mass spectrometry imaging of biological membranes at high spatial resolution / Haley A. Klitzing, Peter K. Weber, and Mary L. Kraft.
    Digital Access Springer 2013
  • Article
    Perkins RL, Slama TG, Fass RJ, Prior RB, Plouffe JF, Warner JF, File TM.
    Rev Infect Dis. 1979 Jan-Feb;1(1):165-9.
    Twenty-seven patients with skin and soft tissue infections, including three with contiguous osteomyelitis, were given cefoxitin intravenously or intramuscularly; the infections of 25 (93%) were resolved with cefoxitin therapy. Etiologic agents included staphylococci, streptococci, Enterobacteriaceae, and anaerobes. Susceptible pathogens were inhibited by less than or equal to 8 micrograms of cefoxitin/ml. This level of drug was surpassed by mean peak serum concentrations eight- to 12-fold after intravenous infusions and two- to threefold after intramuscular injections and resulted in eradication of susceptible organisms from lesions during treatment. Intravenously administered cefoxitin was well tolerated, although eosinophilia, phlebitis, elevation of levels of hepatic enzymes, and a positive direct Coombs' test were observed. Intramuscular injections of cefoxitin in 0.5% lidocaine caused pain and induration and thus were poorly tolerated.
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