نتایج جستجو برای: ribotype

تعداد نتایج: 633  

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2009
J. Glenn Songer Hien T. Trinh George E. Killgore Angela D. Thompson L. Clifford McDonald Brandi M. Limbago

To determine the presence of Clostridium difficile, we sampled cooked and uncooked meat products sold in Tucson, Arizona. Forty-two percent contained toxigenic C. difficile strains (either ribotype 078/toxinotype V [73%] or 027/toxinotype III [NAP1 or NAP1-related; 27%]). These findings indicate that food products may play a role in interspecies C. difficile transmission.

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2009
Haihui Huang Andrej Weintraub Hong Fang Carl Erik Nord

A commercial multiplex real-time PCR assay (Cepheid Xpert C. difficile assay) for the diagnosis of Clostridium difficile infection was evaluated. The sensitivity and specificity of the Cepheid assay were 97.1% and 93.0% for fresh stools, using the cell cytotoxicity neutralization assay as the reference. Using PCR ribotyping as the reference for ribotype 027 strains, the corresponding figures we...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2011
Nicole Stoesser Derrick W Crook Rowena Fung David Griffiths Rosalind M Harding Melina Kachrimanidou Satish Keshav Tim E Peto Alison Vaughan A Sarah Walker Kate E Dingle

Molecular analysis of Clostridium difficile (28 isolates) from children (n = 128) in Oxfordshire, United Kingdom, identified eight toxigenic genotypes. Six of these were isolated from 27% of concurrent adult C. difficile-associated infections studied (n = 83). No children carried hypervirulent PCR ribotype 027. Children could participate in the transmission of some adult disease-causing genotypes.

2013
Orville D Heslop Karen Roye-Green Kathleen Coard Michael R Mulvey

BACKGROUND Clostridium difficile is the major cause of nosocomial antibiotic-associated diarrhoea with the potential risk of progressing to severe clinical outcomes including death. It is not unusual for Clostridium difficile infection to progress to complications of toxic megacolon, bowel perforation and even Gram-negative sepsis following pathological changes in the intestinal mucosa. These c...

2017
Nicole Stoesser David W Eyre T Phuong Quan Heather Godwin Gemma Pill Emily Mbuvi Alison Vaughan David Griffiths Jessica Martin Warren Fawley Kate E Dingle Sarah Oakley Kazimierz Wanelik John M Finney Melina Kachrimanidou Catrin E Moore Sherwood Gorbach Thomas V Riley Derrick W Crook Tim E A Peto Mark H Wilcox A Sarah Walker

BACKGROUND Approximately 30-40% of children <1 year of age are Clostridium difficile colonized, and may represent a reservoir for adult C. difficile infections (CDI). Risk factors for colonization with toxigenic versus non-toxigenic C. difficile strains and longitudinal acquisition dynamics in infants remain incompletely characterized. METHODS Predominantly healthy infants (≤2 years) were rec...

2007
Kevin Keel Jon S. Brazier Karen W. Post Scott Weese Glenn Songer

PCR ribotypes were obtained for 144 Clostridium difficile isolates from neonatal pigs. Porcine isolates comprised four PCR ribotypes but one, ribotype 078, predominated (83%). This was also the most common ribotype (94%) among 33 calf isolates, but was rarely identified in other species. Numerous epidemiologic investigations of human Clostridium difficile-associated disease (CDAD) have employed...

2016
Shelley A. Lyon Melanie L. Hutton Julian I. Rood Jackie K. Cheung Dena Lyras

Clostridium difficile is a global health burden and the leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea worldwide, causing severe gastrointestinal disease and death. Three well characterised toxins are encoded by this bacterium in two genetic loci, specifically, TcdB (toxin B) and TcdA (toxin A) in the Pathogenicity Locus (PaLoc) and binary toxin (CDT) in the genomically distinct CDT locus (Cd...

2016
Abrar K Thabit David P Nicolau

BACKGROUND Clostridium difficile infection ranges from mild to severe prolonged diarrhea with systemic symptoms. Previous studies have assessed the correlation of some disease severity parameters to C. difficile ribotypes. However, certain clinical parameters of interest have not yet been evaluated. AIM We conducted an exploratory study to evaluate the correlation of C. difficile ribotypes to...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2000
M Wiedmann D Weilmeier S S Dineen R Ralyea K J Boor

Putative Pseudomonas spp. isolated predominantly from raw and processed milk were characterized by automated ribotyping and by biochemical reactions. Isolates were biochemically profiled using the Biolog system and API 20 NE and by determining the production of proteases, lipases, and lecithinases for each isolate. Isolates grouped into five coherent clusters, predominated by the species P. put...

2016
Adrianne N. Edwards Samiha T. Karim Ricardo A. Pascual Lina M. Jowhar Sarah E. Anderson Shonna M. McBride

Clostridium difficile is a Gram-positive, sporogenic and anaerobic bacterium that causes a potentially fatal colitis. C. difficile enters the body as dormant spores that germinate in the colon to form vegetative cells that secrete toxins and cause the symptoms of infection. During transit through the intestine, some vegetative cells transform into spores, which are more resistant to killing by ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید