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Patient Offices

Address
Kravis Children
1184 Fifth Avenue , Room 623
New York, NY 10029
Tel
212-241-6985
Fax
212-534-3240
Disabled Access
No

Edward J. Bottone

PROFESSOR EMERITUS  Medicine, Infectious Diseases
PROFESSOR (PART-TIME)  Microbiology
PROFESSOR (PART-TIME)  Pathology

Overview

Subspecialty Medical Microbiology , Infectious Disease
Gender Male
E-mail edward.bottone@mssm.edu
Education and Training PHD, St. John's University
  Ph.D., St. John's University
  M.S., Wagner College
  , City College of New York

Dr. Bottone is a consultative Microbiologist. His area of research is focused on analyzing clinically derived bacterial and fungal isolates with unusual clinical correlations.

Training

Education and Training PHD, St. John's University
  Ph.D., St. John's University
  M.S., Wagner College
  , City College of New York
Board Certification Medical Microbiology

Clinical Practice

Subspecialty Medical Microbiology , Infectious Disease
Board Certification Medical Microbiology

Research

Detection and characterization of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aereus.

Publications

Bottone EJ, Peluso RA. Bacillus pumilis active against Mucor and Asperigillus species: Preliminary report. J. Med Microbiol 2003; 52: 69-74.


Bottone EJ, Cheng M, Hymes S. Ineffectiveness of handwashing with lotion soap to remove nosocomial bacterial pathogens persisting on fingertips: A major link in their intrahospital spread. Infect Ctrl. Hospit Epidemiol 2004; 25: 262-264.


Stebbins W, Krishtul A, Bottone EJ, Cohen S. Cutaneous adiaspiromycosis: a distinct dermatologic entity associated with Chrysosporium species. J. Am. Acad.Dermatol 2004;: S185-S189.


Bottone EJ, Cho K. Mycobacterium chelonei keratitis: elucidation of diagnosis. Cornea 2005; 24: 356-358.


Caplivski D, Salama C, Huprikar S, Bottone EJ. Disseminated histoplasmosis in five immunosuppressed patients: clinical, diagnostic, and therapeutic perspectives. Rev. Med. Microbiol 2005; 16: 1-7.


Epstein SP, Bottone EJ, Asbell PA. Susceptibility testing of clinical isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to levofloxin, moxifloxacin, and gatifloxacin. Eye and Contact 2006; 32: 240-244.


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