Amanote Research
Register
Sign In
Didanosine (DDI) Alone Is Now Considered the First-Line Therapy for Symptomatic Children Infected With HIV
Journal of the American Osteopathic Association, The
- United States
doi 10.7556/jaoa.1996.96.6.339c
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract
Available in
full text
Categories
Medicine
Alternative Medicine
Complementary
Date
June 1, 1996
Authors
Unknown
Publisher
American Osteopathic Association
Related search
Combination Therapy With Stavudine (D4T), Didanosine (ddI), and Indinavir in HIV-Infected Children • 727
Pediatric Research
Child Health
Pediatrics
Perinatology
Combination Therapy With Stavudine (D4t) and Didanosine (Ddi) in Children With Advanced Human Immunodeficiency Virus (Hiv) Infection. • 1039
Pediatric Research
Child Health
Pediatrics
Perinatology
Combination Therapy With Stavudine (D4T) Plus Didanosine (ddI) in Children With Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection
Pediatrics
Child Health
Pediatrics
Perinatology
Factors Associated With First-Line Antiretroviral Therapy Failure Amongst HIV-Infected African Patients: A Case-Control Study
World Journal of AIDS
Aggressive Medical Therapy Alone Is Adequate in Certain Patients With Severe Symptomatic Carotid Stenosis
Stroke
Cardiology
Neurology
Cardiovascular Medicine
Advanced
Medicine
Neuroscience
Specialized Nursing
Extensive Drug Resistance in HIV-Infected Cambodian Children Who Are Undetected as Failing First-Line Antiretroviral Therapy by WHO 2010 Guidelines
AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses
Virology
Infectious Diseases
Immunology
Single Genome Analysis for the Detection of Linked Multiclass Drug Resistance Mutations in HIV-1-Infected Children After Failure of Protease Inhibitor-Based First-Line Therapy
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
Infectious Diseases
Pharmacology
The Use of Mannitol in HIV-infected Patients With Symptomatic Cryptococcal Meningitis
Drug discoveries & therapeutics
Medicine
Toxicology
Pharmaceutics
Pharmacology
Long-Term Efficacy of First Line Antiretroviral Therapy in Indian HIV-1 Infected Patients: A Longitudinal Cohort Study
PLoS ONE
Multidisciplinary