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Volume 9, Number 6, June 2003 Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in Singapore: Clinical Features of Index Patient and Initial ContactsLi-Yang Hsu,* Cheng-Chuan Lee,* Justin A. Green,* Brenda Ang,* Nicholas
I. Paton,* Lawrence Lee,* Jorge S. Villacian,* Poh-Lian Lim,* Arul Earnest,*
and Yee-Sin Leo* |
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Figure 3. Chest radiographs of two patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). a–c: radiographs of patient 5 showing progression of changes. a, day 8 of symptoms; b, day 13 of symptoms, c, day 14 of symptoms. He died on day 19 of this illness. d, chest radiograph, taken on day 8 of symptoms, of patient 12, with right upper lobe infiltrates resembling pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) but laryngeal swab cultures for TB were negative. |
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This page last reviewed May 19, 2003 |
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Emerging
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