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Aerosolization

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26:. Aerosolization refers to a process of intentionally oxidatively converting and suspending particles or a composition in a moving stream of air for the purpose of delivering the oxidized particles or composition to a particular location. 29:
The term is often used in medicine to refer specifically to the production of airborne particles (e.g. tiny liquid droplets) containing infectious virus or bacteria. The infectious organism is said to be
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Best, E. L.; Sandoe, J. A. T.; Wilcox, M. H. (2012). "Potential for aerosolization of Clostridium difficile after flushing toilets: The role of toilet lids in reducing environmental contamination risk".
34:. This can occur when an infected individual coughs, sneezes exhales, or vomits, but can also arise from flushing a toilet, or disturbing dried contaminated feces. 286: 219: 22:
is the process or act of converting some physical substance into the form of particles small and light enough to be carried on the air i.e. into an
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is the tendency of finely divided solids to generate aerosols from an external stimulus and can be quantified or measured.
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Treatment of some respiratory diseases relies on aerosolization of a liquid medication using a
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Johnson, G. R.; Morawska, L. (2009). "The Mechanism of Breath Aerosol Formation".
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The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (February 2024).
255: 201: 193: 128: 119: 102: 23: 290: 52:, aerosolization is a means of dispersing a chemical or biological 41:, which is then breathed in for direct transport to the lungs. 270:"Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS): What You Need To Know" 172:
Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery
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Center For Infectious Disease Research & Policy
16:Process of converting a substance into an aerosol 317:"Quantification of Airborne Dusts From Powders" 8: 220:Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 183: 118: 287:"Botulinum Toxin as a Biological Weapon" 75: 7: 101:Tang, J. W.; Settles, G. S. (2008). 14: 152:(November 2005). Archived from 107:New England Journal of Medicine 56:in an attack. See for example " 216:"Norovirus, Clinical Overview" 1: 236:Journal of Hospital Infection 363: 248:10.1016/j.jhin.2011.08.010 60:as a Biological Weapon". 143:"Microbe-laden aerosols" 103:"Coughing and Aerosols" 194:10.1089/jamp.2008.0720 120:10.1056/NEJMicm072576 275:. CDC. 2018-02-12. 222:(CDC). 2018-12-21. 150:Microbiology Today 88:patents.justia.com 50:biological weapons 44:In the context of 273:(PDF 1.4 MB) 157:(PDF 217 KB) 354: 331: 330: 328: 326: 321: 312: 306: 305: 303: 302: 293:. Archived from 283: 277: 276: 274: 266: 260: 259: 230: 224: 223: 212: 206: 205: 187: 167: 161: 160: 158: 147: 139: 133: 132: 122: 98: 92: 91: 80: 362: 361: 357: 356: 355: 353: 352: 351: 337: 336: 335: 334: 324: 322: 319: 314: 313: 309: 300: 298: 285: 284: 280: 272: 268: 267: 263: 232: 231: 227: 214: 213: 209: 185:10.1.1.651.7875 169: 168: 164: 156: 145: 141: 140: 136: 100: 99: 95: 82: 81: 77: 72: 58:Botulinum Toxin 17: 12: 11: 5: 360: 358: 350: 349: 339: 338: 333: 332: 307: 278: 261: 225: 207: 178:(3): 229–237. 162: 159:on 2007-10-14. 134: 93: 74: 73: 71: 68: 20:Aerosolization 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 359: 348: 345: 344: 342: 318: 311: 308: 297:on 2013-05-06 296: 292: 288: 282: 279: 271: 265: 262: 257: 253: 249: 245: 241: 237: 229: 226: 221: 217: 211: 208: 203: 199: 195: 191: 186: 181: 177: 173: 166: 163: 155: 151: 144: 138: 135: 130: 126: 121: 116: 112: 108: 104: 97: 94: 89: 85: 79: 76: 69: 67: 65: 61: 59: 55: 51: 47: 42: 40: 35: 33: 27: 25: 21: 323:. Retrieved 310: 299:. Retrieved 295:the original 281: 264: 239: 235: 228: 210: 175: 171: 165: 154:the original 149: 137: 110: 106: 96: 87: 78: 62: 43: 36: 31: 28: 19: 18: 113:(15): e19. 32:aerosolized 301:2012-05-02 242:(1): 1–5. 70:References 180:CiteSeerX 64:Dustiness 39:nebulizer 347:Aerosols 341:Category 256:22137761 202:19415984 129:18843121 46:chemical 24:aerosol 325:9 July 254:  200:  182:  127:  320:(PDF) 146:(PDF) 54:agent 327:2024 252:PMID 198:PMID 125:PMID 48:and 244:doi 190:doi 115:doi 111:359 343:: 289:. 250:. 240:80 238:. 218:. 196:. 188:. 176:22 174:. 148:. 123:. 109:. 105:. 86:. 329:. 304:. 258:. 246:: 204:. 192:: 131:. 117:: 90:.

Index

aerosol
nebulizer
chemical
biological weapons
agent
Botulinum Toxin
Dustiness
"Kelly K. Houston Inventions, Patents and Patent Applications - Justia Patents Search"
"Coughing and Aerosols"
doi
10.1056/NEJMicm072576
PMID
18843121
"Microbe-laden aerosols"
the original
CiteSeerX
10.1.1.651.7875
doi
10.1089/jamp.2008.0720
PMID
19415984
"Norovirus, Clinical Overview"
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
doi
10.1016/j.jhin.2011.08.010
PMID
22137761
"Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS): What You Need To Know"
"Botulinum Toxin as a Biological Weapon"
Center For Infectious Disease Research & Policy

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