Search results for "Italy"

showing 10 items of 2893 documents

Survey on the prevalence of leptospira infections in the Italian population.

1994

This investigation is the first nationwide survey on the circulation of leptospira infections in human beings in Italy. In nine out of twenty Italian regions, representative samples of the population were investigated for the presence of leptospira infections. Unexpectedly, leptospira infections were found to be widespread, the number of cases being much higher than the diagnosed clinical cases. There were found to be high, medium, and low risk areas. On the whole, the risk for the rural population was no higher than the risk for urban dwellers; leisure activities, contact with animals and residence on the plain versus residence in the hills were important risk factors. There was an unident…

SerotypeAdultMaleRural Populationmedicine.medical_specialtyVeterinary medicineUrban PopulationEpidemiologyPopulationLeisure ActivitiesResidence CharacteristicsRisk FactorsSeroepidemiologic StudiesEnvironmental healthEpidemiologymedicinePrevalenceHumansMass ScreeningLeptospirosisRisk factorSerotypingeducationLeptospiraeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryPublic healthmedicine.diseaseLeptospirosisHealth SurveysItalyPopulation SurveillanceResidenceFemalebusinessLeptospira InfectionsEuropean journal of epidemiology
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Enhanced surveillance of invasive listeriosis in the Lombardy region, Italy, in the years 2006-2010 reveals major clones and an increase in serotype …

2013

Background Invasive listeriosis is a rare, life-threatening foodborne disease. Lombardy, an Italian region accounting for 16% of the total population, reported 55% of all listeriosis cases in the years 2006-2010. The aim of our study was to provide a snapshot of listeriosis epidemiology in this region after the implementation of a voluntary laboratory-based surveillance system. Methods We characterized by serotyping, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, multilocus sequence typing and detection of epidemic clone markers, 134 isolates from 132 listeriosis cases, including 15 pregnancy-related cases, occurring in the years 2006-2010 in Lombardy. Demographic and clinical characteristics of cases h…

SerotypeAdultMaleVeterinary medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyListeria monocytogenes molecular typing surveillanceSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaAdolescentListeria nonocytogenes; listeriosi invasive; epidemiologiaListeriaSettore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E ApplicataYoung AdultPregnancyEpidemiologyCase fatality ratemedicinePrevalenceHumansListeriosisSerotypingAgedAged 80 and overMolecular EpidemiologybiologyMolecular epidemiologybusiness.industryInfant NewbornOutbreakInfantMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classificationVirologyElectrophoresis Gel Pulsed-FieldInfectious DiseasesItalyListeriaMultilocus sequence typingInvasive ListeriosisFemaleErratumbusinessMultilocus Sequence TypingResearch ArticleBMC Infectious Diseases
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Phage types and ribotypes of Salmonella enteritidis in southern Italy.

1996

Differently from other European countries, Southern Italy was affected by a considerable increase in human infections due to Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Enteritidis (S. Enteritidis) only after 1990. On the present investigation, two groups of S. Enteritidis strains isolated during the low-incidence period 1980-1984 and the epidemic period 1990-1993, respectively, have been submitted to phage-typing and ribotyping in order to ascertain whether the epidemic increase was determined by the spread of a foreign bacterial clone or not. Among the 150 isolates relative to the aforesaid two periods, 12 different phage types (PTs) were observed. PT4 was the most common phage type among…

SerotypeDNA BacterialbiologySalmonella enteritidisImmunologybiology.organism_classificationDNA RibosomalMicrobiologyBacterial Typing TechniquesDisease OutbreaksBacteriophageRibotypingItalySalmonella enteritidisSalmonella entericaGenotypeSalmonella InfectionsHumansTypingBacteriophage TypingPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthPhage typingZentralblatt fur Bakteriologie : international journal of medical microbiology
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High incidence of G9P[8] rotavirus infections in Italian children during the winter season 1999-2000

2002

We report a significant high incidence of infection with G9P[8] rotavirus in Italian children during the winter epidemic season 1999-2000. The study was carried out on 439 children < 4 years hospitalized with acute diarrhea in Palermo. G9P[8] strains constituted 19% of all rotavirus identified and were not associated with more severe forms of gastroenteritis.

SerotypePediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtybiologyEpidemiologybusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)diarrheaReoviridaebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeVirologyDiarrhearotavirusEl NiñoItalyRotavirusEpidemiologyMedicinegastroenteritimedicine.symptombusinessFeces
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Nucleotide variation in the VP7 gene affects PCR genotyping of G9 rotaviruses identified in Italy

2003

A modified (aFT9m) and a degenerate (aFT9d) version of the rotavirus G9-specific primer (aFT9) allowed strains that were previously untypable, because of point mutations accumulating at the primer binding site, to be G typed by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. The strains were collected during 2001-2002 in Italy in hospitals of the Apulia region, from children affected by severe rotavirus-associated enteritis. Using a wide selection of G9 rotaviruses detected worldwide, sequencing of the G9 untypable strains, sequence comparison, and phylogenetic analysis showed that the Italian strains have strong genetic similarity (< or =99.4%) to G9 rotaviruses identified recently in man…

SerotypeRotavirusGenotypeReassortmentMolecular Sequence DataBiologymedicine.disease_causePolymerase Chain ReactionRotavirus InfectionsVirologyRotavirusGenetic variationGenotypemedicineHumansTypingChildGenotypingAntigens ViralPhylogenyDNA PrimersGeneticsBase SequenceGenetic VariationVirologyEnteritisInfectious DiseasesItalyCapsid ProteinsPrimer binding site
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Electropherotypes, subgroups and serotypes of human rotavirus strains causing gastroenteritis in infants and young children in Palermo, Italy, from 1…

1990

During 1985-89, an epidemiological survey was conducted in Palermo, Sicily (Southern Italy) on group A human rotavirus (HRV) strains which cause gastroenteritis in infants and young children. Two hundred and thirty eight HRV strains were characterized for subgroup and serotype using monoclonal-antibody-based ELISA systems, and for electropherotype using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Subgroup II strains were largely predominant, constituting 218/238 of the positive stool samples (91.6%). Among the serotypes, 192/238 strains (80.7%) were serotype 1 and 16 strains (6.7%) were serotype 4; serotype 2 circulated intermittently and serotype 3 was nearly absent (only one subgroup I strain was…

SerotypeRotavirusImmunologyA serotypeAntibodies MonoclonalInfantEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayBiologyGroup AVirologyRotavirus InfectionsMicrobiologyGastroenteritisrotavirus; gastroenteritisFecesItalyVirologyChild PreschoolHuman rotavirusHumansElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelSerotypingResearch in virology
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G2 rotavirus infections in an infantile population of the South of Italy: variability of viral strains over time.

2005

Rotavirus positive samples collected in Palermo, Italy, during 2002–2004 did not react with the G2 type-specific RV5:3 monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) and could be identified as G2 only by RT-PCR genotyping. The genetic variation of VP7 and VP4 antigenic proteins was studied in 14 G2 samples including a selection of both those successfully characterized by serotyping and those failing to be serotyped. The phylogenetic analysis performed on partial VP7 sequences showed a temporal clustering of these strains, with those isolated in Palermo in 2003 belonging to the same lineage of G2 MAbs-unreactive strains identified in UK in 1996–1997 and in Bari, Italy, in 2003–2004. A single amino acid substi…

SerotypeRotavirusSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaTime FactorsSettore MED/17 - Malattie InfettivevirusesPopulationReoviridaemedicine.disease_causeVirusRotavirus InfectionsFecesfluids and secretionsVirologyRotavirusGenetic variationmedicineHumansSerotypingeducationGenotypingAntigens ViralPhylogenyGeneticsrotavirus G2 genetic variation phylogenetic analysiseducation.field_of_studybiologyPhylogenetic treeInfant Newbornvirus diseasesInfantbiology.organism_classificationVirologyInfectious DiseasesItalyChild PreschoolCapsid ProteinsJournal of medical virology
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Salmonella serovars identified at the centre for enterobacteriaceae of palermo over the 5-year period 1983-87

1990

Salmonellosis is become an increasing public health problem in many countries. Serotyping and assessment of antibiotic resistance are useful tools, which assist in understanding the epidemiology of Salmonella infections. In this respect, the Centre of Enterobacteriaceae of Southern Italy provides helpful information on the changing pattern of Salmonella serovars in this geographic area. This paper reports the distribution of serovars and their antibiotic susceptibility in the years 1983-1987. In particular, because of their peculiar trends during this 5-year period, epidemiological features of Mbandaka, Corvallis, Dublin, Infantis and Wien serovars are described.

SerotypeSalmonella Infections Animalmedicine.medical_specialtySalmonellaAntiinfective agentbiologyEpidemiologybusiness.industryPublic healthMicrobial Sensitivity TestsDrug resistancebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeEnterobacteriaceaeMicrobiologyAntibiotic resistanceItalySalmonellaEnvironmental healthSalmonella InfectionsEpidemiologymedicineAnimalsHumansbusinessEuropean Journal of Epidemiology
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Molecular Typing Reveals Frequent Clustering among Human Isolates of Listeria monocytogenes in Italy

2009

In Italy, the annual incidence of reported cases of listeriosis amounts in recent years (2004 to 2006) to 0.8 cases per million inhabitants. Our study is a subtyping analysis by serotyping, ribotyping, and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis of 44 human isolates from apparently sporadic cases of infection in the Lombardy region and in the Province of Florence, Italy, in the years 1996 to 2007. Based on the results of the different subtyping methods, 10 occasions were detected when strains of L. monocytogenes with the same subtype were isolated from more than one listeriosis case. A total of 28 (66.7%) out of 44 isolates were attributed to molecular subtype clusters. Our data support t…

Serotypemedicine.medical_specialtyBiologySettore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E Applicatamedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyMicrobiologyImmunocompromised HostRibotypingListeria monocytogenesListeria monocytogenes epidemiology human cases molecular typingMolecular geneticsGenotypemedicineCluster AnalysisHumansListeriosisTypingAgedMolecular epidemiologyListeria monocytogenesVirologySubtypingBacterial Typing TechniquesItalyFood ScienceJournal of Food Protection
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Infections caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa: relatively frequent isolation of serogroup 12 from clinical specimens.

1985

Serological typing of P. aeruginosa is the most simple and reliable procedure recommended for ≪ in-house ≫ investigations and for studies of suspected outbreaks of infection by this microorganism. It is also a useful procedure in order to know serotype prevalence in a definite geografical area and to obtain indications about the more appropriate composition of polivalent anti-Pseudomonas vaccines. In the present report, we describe the relatively high frequency of isolation of serogroup 12 from patients in Palermo, Italy. Serogroup 12 is very rare in north-Europe and in the USA, and, as a consequence, it is not included in some vaccine preparations. In Palermo, strains belonging to this ser…

Serotypemedicine.medical_specialtyIsolation (health care)Pseudomonas VaccinesEpidemiologymedicine.drug_classAntibioticsBurn Unitsmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologySerologyEpidemiologymedicineHumansSurgical Wound InfectionPseudomonas InfectionsTypingVaccines CombinedSerotypingRespiratory Tract InfectionsPseudomonas aeruginosabusiness.industryOutbreakVirologyItalyBacterial VaccinesPseudomonas aeruginosaUrinary Tract InfectionsbusinessBurnsEuropean journal of epidemiology
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