Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) infections are relatively rare but increasingly concerning. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there were an estimated 13,100 cases of CRE infections in the United States in 2017, with numbers likely increasing in subsequent years. The exact number of individuals diagnosed with CRE can vary, but health authorities continue to monitor and report on these infections due to their significant public health implications.
CRE can live unnoticed in the intestines and not cause any problems in otherwise healthy people. People with weakened immune systems are most likely to be affected by CRE infections. If the CRE bacteria can get to the lungs, urinary tract or bloodstream, they can cause major problems because they are resistant to every antibiotic commonly used. If the same bacteria are NOT CRE, they still cause pneumonia in the lungs, urinary tract infections, or sepsis in the blood, but the patient can be treated successfully with antibiotics. With CRE versions of the same bacteria, antibiotics don't help the patient. In the example of the CRE bacteria getting into the bloodstream, as many as 1/2 of the infected patients die from the infection.
3 cre-a-tive
2. Cre -dit
3. cre/a/tion
3- cre-a-ted
4 syllables - IN CRE DI BLE
There are 3 syllables. Cre-a-tive.
There are four syllables. Se-cre-to-ry.
There are three syllables. Cre-a-tor.
Cre Aspal - creed of the Apostles (Irish)
Around 700 but it is growing all the time.
CRE stands for many different things, the most likely in this case is Commercial Real Estate. T he phrase may refer to the field in general or may be the name of an individual company.