Search results for "INFECTIONS"

showing 10 items of 2671 documents

Aeromonas hydrophila subsp. dhakensis isolated from feces, water and fish in Mediterranean Spain.

2012

Eight Aeromonas hydrophila-like arabinose-negative isolates from diverse sources (i.e., river freshwater, cooling-system water pond, diseased wild European eels, and human stools) sampled in Valencia (Spain) during 2004-2005, were characterized by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and extensive biochemical testing along with reference strains of most Aeromonas species. These isolates and all reference strains of A. hydrophila subsp. dhakensis and A. aquariorum showed a 16S rRNA sequence similarity of 99.8-100%, and they all shared an identical phenotype. This matched exactly with that of A. hydrophila subsp. dhakensis since all strains displayed positive responses to the Voges-Prokauer test and to t…

DNA BacterialFresh WaterMicrobial Sensitivity TestsAmoxicillin-Potassium Clavulanate CombinationCefoxitinFecesDrug Resistance Multiple BacterialRNA Ribosomal 16SAnimalsHumansTicarcillinemerging pathogen16S rRNA gene sequencingBase SequenceSequence Analysis RNAA. hydrophila subsp. dhakensisFishesArticlesbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbacterial infections and mycosesAeromonas hydrophilaImipenemPhenotypeSpainphenotypic profilebacteriaMicrobes and environments
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Vibrio ponticus sp. nov., a neighbour of V fluvialis-V. furnissii clade, isolated from gilthead sea bream, mussels and seawater.

2004

A new Vibrio species, Vibrio ponticus, is proposed to accommodate four marine bacteria isolated from sea water, mussels and diseased sea bream (Sparus aurata), at the Mediterranean coast of Spain. Strains are Gram negative, slightly halophilic bacteria that require Na+ ion for growth, oxidase and catalase positive, negative for arginine dihydrolase and ornithine decarboxylase but positive for lysine decarboxylase and indole, and utilize beta-hydroxybutyrate as a sole carbon source. Phylogenetic analysis locate these marine bacteria in the vicinity of the V. fluvialis-V. furnissii clade, sharing with these two species 16S rDNA sequence similarities slightly above 97% (97.1 and 97.3%, respect…

DNA BacterialIndolesCarboxy-LyasesHydrolasesMolecular Sequence DataBiologyOrnithine DecarboxylaseApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyDNA RibosomalMicrobiologyMarine bacteriophageVibrionaceaeVibrio InfectionsRNA Ribosomal 16SSequence Homology Nucleic AcidMediterranean SeaAnimalsSeawaterRibosomal DNAEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyVibrioLysine decarboxylase3-Hydroxybutyric AcidFatty AcidsNucleic Acid HybridizationSequence Analysis DNA16S ribosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationCatalaseVibrioSea BreamBivalviaSpainVibrio InfectionsPhenazinesGentian VioletOxidoreductasesBacteriaSystematic and applied microbiology
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Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato in Ixodes ricinus ticks collected from migratory birds in Southern Norway

2010

Abstract Background Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (s.l.) are the causative agent for Lyme borreliosis (LB), the most common tick-borne disease in the northern hemisphere. Birds are considered important in the global dispersal of ticks and tick-borne pathogens through their migration. The present study is the first description of B. burgdorferi prevalence and genotypes in Ixodes ricinus ticks feeding on birds during spring and autumn migration in Norway. Methods 6538 migratory birds were captured and examined for ticks at Lista Bird Observatory during the spring and the autumn migration in 2008. 822 immature I. ricinus ticks were collected from 215 infested birds. Ticks were investigated f…

DNA BacterialIxodes ricinusZoologyVDP::Medical disciplines: 700::Clinical medical disciplines: 750::Communicable diseases: 776Polymerase Chain ReactionMicrobiologylaw.inventionBirdsLyme diseaselawRNA Ribosomal 16Sparasitic diseasesmedicinePrevalenceAnimalsBorrelia burgdorferiPolymerase chain reactionTick-borne diseaseLyme DiseaseVDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Parasitology: 484Chi-Square Distributionlcsh:Veterinary medicineGeneral VeterinarybiologyIxodesBird DiseasesNorwayResearchRicinusGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseasebacterial infections and mycosesTick-Borne DiseasesBorrelia burgdorferiBiological dispersallcsh:SF600-1100IxodesAnimal MigrationSeasonsActa Veterinaria Scandinavica
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BORRELIA BURGDORFERI SENSU LATO DETECTED IN SKIN OF NORWEGIAN MOUNTAIN HARES (LEPUS TIMIDUS) WITHOUT SIGNS OF DISSEMINATION

2011

The mountain hare (Lepus timidus) population in southern Norway appears to be in decline. Necropsy and laboratory examinations of 36 hares found dead or diseased during 2007-2009 in Vest- and Aust-Agder counties showed that disease and deaths were attributed to multiple causes, with no specific etiology emerging as a cause for population decline. To investigate whether Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (s.l.) infection is associated with mortality in mountain hares, tissues and ticks collected from hares were investigated for infection with the spirochete. Borrelia burgdorferi s.l. DNA was not detected in samples from internal organs, whereas Borrelia afzelii, B. burgdorferi sensu stricto (s.…

DNA BacterialMaleConservation of Natural ResourcesIxodes ricinusanimal diseasesPopulationAnimals WildBorrelia afzeliimedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyTicksBorrelia burgdorferi GroupSensuBorreliaparasitic diseasesmedicineAnimalsBorrelia burgdorferieducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSkinLyme Diseaseeducation.field_of_studyEcologybiologyNorwayBorreliaHaresbacterial infections and mycosesbiology.organism_classificationPopulation declineFemaleLepus timidusJournal of Wildlife Diseases
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Characterization of a Catalase-Negative Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Strain

2007

ABSTRACT We describe an unusual clinical strain of catalase-negative methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus sensu stricto. Sequence analysis of its catalase gene showed 99.60% identities to the catalase genes of the reference strains. A 5-base deletion, however, led to a shift of the nucleotide reading frame and a loss of the enzymatic activity.

DNA BacterialMaleMicrobiology (medical)Staphylococcus aureusSequence analysisMolecular Sequence DataBiologymedicine.disease_causeStaphylococcal infectionsMicrobiologyparasitic diseasesmedicineHumansGeneAgedchemistry.chemical_classificationStrain (chemistry)BacteriologySequence Analysis DNAStaphylococcal InfectionsCatalasebacterial infections and mycosesmedicine.diseaseMethicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureusEnzymechemistryStaphylococcus aureusCatalasebiology.proteinMethicillin ResistanceJournal of Clinical Microbiology
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Infection with cagA -Positive and cagA -Negative Types of Helicobacter pylori Among Children and Adolescents with Gastrointestinal Symptoms in Latvia

2003

In order to determine the prevalence of concomitant cagA-positive and cagA-negative Helicobacter pylori genotypes in individual subjects, a group of 56 symptomatic patients (aged 8-18 years) was studied. Among 31 patients culture-positive for Helicobacter pylori, only cagA-positive colonies were isolated from 18 patients, both cagA-positive and cagA-negative genotypes were isolated from 4 patients, and in 9 patients all of the individual colonies isolated were cagA-negative, but in seven of them a pool of colonies was positive for cagA. Thus, the presence of both cagA-positive and cagA-negative genotypes in the same individual was identified in 11 of the 31 culture-positive patients tested,…

DNA BacterialMaleMicrobiology (medical)medicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentGenotypeGastrointestinal DiseasesSpirillaceaeBiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionRisk AssessmentSensitivity and SpecificitySeverity of Illness Indexdigestive systemHelicobacter InfectionsCohort StudiesAge DistributionMedical microbiologyBacterial Proteinsmental disordersEpidemiologyGenotypePrevalencemedicineHumansCagAProspective StudiesTypingSex DistributionChildProbabilityAntigens BacterialChi-Square DistributionHelicobacter pyloriGeneral MedicineHelicobacter pyloribacterial infections and mycosesbiology.organism_classificationLatviadigestive system diseasesInfectious DiseasesConcomitantImmunologybacteriaFemaleEuropean Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases
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First Report of Anaplasma phagocytophilum and Babesia microti in Rodents in Finland

2014

Tick-borne diseases pose an increasingly important public health problem in Europe. Rodents are the reservoir host for many tick-transmitted pathogens, including Anaplasma phagocytophilum and Babesia microti, which can cause human granulocytic anaplasmosis and babesiosis, respectively. To estimate the presence of these pathogens in rodents in Finland, we examined blood samples from 151 bank voles (Myodes glareolus) and demonstrate, for the first time, that A. phagocytophilum and B. microti commonly infect bank voles (in 22% and 40% of animals, respectively) in Finland. Sequence analysis of a fragment of 18S rRNA showed that the B. microti strain isolated was identical to the Munich strain, …

DNA BacterialMaleVeterinary medicineAnaplasmosisHuman granulocytic anaplasmosisanimal diseasesZoologyRodentiaTickBabesia microtiMicrobiologyRodent DiseasesTicksVirologyIxodes triangulicepsBabesiosisZoonosesparasitic diseasesmedicineAnimalsHumansFinlandTick-borne diseasebiologyArvicolinaeBabesiosisOriginal ArticlesSequence Analysis DNADNA Protozoanbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseasebacterial infections and mycosesAnaplasma phagocytophilumInfectious DiseasesArvicolinaeTick-Borne Diseasesta1181FemalePublic HealthAnaplasmosisAnaplasma phagocytophilum
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The incidence of influenza-associated hospitalizations in children in Germany

2002

Since new vaccines and anti-viral drugs for influenza have become available, collation of actual and country-specific epidemiological data is essential. Since respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a well known paediatric airway pathogen and some epidemiological data exist already, a comparison between influenza and RSV seems warranted. From July 1996 to June 2001 the naso-pharyngeal aspirates (NPA) of children from birth to 16 years of age, admitted to one of the two paediatric hospitals in Kiel, Germany, were investigated by a nine-valent multiplex reverse transcriptase PCR assay. NPA were investigated in 60·8% of 3469 children admitted with an acute respiratory tract infection. Community-a…

DNA BacterialMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsAdolescentHeart DiseasesEpidemiologyPopulationOrthomyxoviridaeRespiratory Syncytial Virus InfectionsRisk FactorsGermanyNasopharynxInfluenza HumanEpidemiologymedicineHumansChildeducationAcute respiratory tract infectionAsthmaeducation.field_of_studybiologyReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reactionbusiness.industryIncidenceIncidence (epidemiology)Infant NewbornInfantvirus diseasesmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationAsthmaHospitalizationVaccinationInfectious DiseasesChild PreschoolFemaleViral diseasebusinessResearch ArticleEpidemiology and Infection
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pilF polymorphism-based PCR to distinguish Vibrio vulnificus strains potentially dangerous to public health

2010

ABSTRACT Vibrio vulnificus is a heterogeneous species that comprises strains virulent and avirulent for humans and fish, and it is grouped into three biotypes. In this report, we describe a PCR-based methodology that allows both the species identification and discrimination of those isolates that could be considered dangerous to public health. Discrimination is based on the amplification of a variable region located within the gene pilF , which seems to be associated with potential human pathogenicity, regardless of the biotype of the strain.

DNA BacterialMalemedicine.medical_specialtyVirulence FactorsMolecular Sequence DataVirulenceMicrobiologiaPublic Health MicrobiologyVibrio vulnificusBiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionApplied Microbiology and Biotechnologylaw.inventionMicrobiologyMiceBacterial ProteinslawVibrionaceaeVibrio InfectionsmedicineAnimalsHumansVibrio vulnificusGenePolymerase chain reactionGeneticsBacteriological TechniquesMice Inbred BALB CPolymorphism GeneticBase SequenceVirulenceEcologyPublic healthFishesSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationPathogenicityVibrio InfectionsFimbriae ProteinsSequence AlignmentFood ScienceBiotechnology
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dltA overexpression: A strain-independent keystone of daptomycin resistance in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus

2013

The mechanisms leading to reduced susceptibility to daptomycin (DAP) are multifactorial and have not been fully elucidated. We analysed, by sequencing and expression studies, the role of the major molecular targets (cell-envelope charge genes, dltA, mprF, cls2; cell-wall turnover and autolysis genes, sceD, atl) involved in the emergence of DAP resistance in three series of isogenic clinical methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in which DAP resistance emerged after a heterogeneous glycopeptide-intermediate S. aureus (hGISA) step under teicoplanin and DAP therapy. All of the isolates had different genotypes and were delta-haemolysin negative, reflecting a strain proclivity to ac…

DNA BacterialMethicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureusMicrobiology (medical)Settore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaGenotypemedicine.drug_classAntibioticsGene ExpressionBiologyReal-Time Polymerase Chain Reactionmedicine.disease_causeStaphylococcal infectionsMicrobiologyDaptomycinDrug Resistance BacterialmedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)Carbon-Oxygen LigasesGeneTeicoplaninSequence Analysis DNAGeneral MedicineStaphylococcal Infectionsmedicine.diseaseMethicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureusGlycopeptideMRSA daptomycin resistanceAnti-Bacterial AgentsInfectious DiseasesStaphylococcus aureusMutationDaptomycinmedicine.drug
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