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added vanA to vanE positive Enterococci

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2018-09-05 09:49:19 +02:00
parent b388e3fee7
commit 790bd1622d
8 changed files with 9 additions and 9 deletions

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@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ This `AMR` package basically does four important things:
1. It **cleanses existing data**, by transforming it to reproducible and profound *classes*, making the most efficient use of R. These functions all use artificial intelligence to guess results that you would expect:
* Use `as.mo` to get an ID of a microorganism. The IDs are quite obvious - the ID of *E. coli* is "ESCCOL" and the ID of *S. aureus* is "STAAUR". The function takes almost any text as input that looks like the name or code of a microorganism like "E. coli", "esco" and "esccol". Even `as.mo("MRSA")` will return the ID of *S. aureus*. Moreover, it can group all coagulase negative and positive *Staphylococci*, and can transform *Streptococci* into Lancefield groups. To find bacteria based on your input, this package contains a freely available database of ~2,650 different (potential) human pathogenic microorganisms.
* Use `as.mo` to get an ID of a microorganism. The IDs are quite obvious - the ID of *E. coli* is "ESCCOL" and the ID of *S. aureus* is "STAAUR". The function takes almost any text as input that looks like the name or code of a microorganism like "E. coli", "esco" and "esccol". Even `as.mo("MRSA")` will return the ID of *S. aureus*. Moreover, it can group all coagulase negative and positive *Staphylococci*, and can transform *Streptococci* into Lancefield groups. To find bacteria based on your input, this package contains a freely available database of almost 3,000 different (potential) human pathogenic microorganisms.
* Use `as.rsi` to transform values to valid antimicrobial results. It produces just S, I or R based on your input and warns about invalid values. Even values like "<=0.002; S" (combined MIC/RSI) will result in "S".
* Use `as.mic` to cleanse your MIC values. It produces a so-called factor (called *ordinal* in SPSS) with valid MIC values as levels. A value like "<=0.002; S" (combined MIC/RSI) will result in "<=0.002".
* Use `as.atc` to get the ATC code of an antibiotic as defined by the WHO. This package contains a database with most LIS codes, official names, DDDs and even trade names of antibiotics. For example, the values "Furabid", "Furadantin", "nitro" all return the ATC code of Nitrofurantoine.