نتایج جستجو برای: bartonella henselae

تعداد نتایج: 2153  

Journal: :Frontiers in bioscience : a journal and virtual library 2003
Sanjiv S Shah Joseph P McGowan

Myocarditis and pericarditis are uncommon complications of human rickettsial, ehrlichial and Bartonella infections. Myocardial inflammation usually occurs in the setting of acute disseminated infection. Organisms associated with myocarditis include: Rickettsia rickettsii, R. conorii, Orientia tsutsugamushi, Coxiella burnetii, Anaplasma phagocytophila (the causative agent of Human Granulocytic E...

Journal: :Heart 1997
A S Breathnach J M Hoare S J Eykyn

Two cases of bartonella endocarditis are described: one in a 55 year old homeless alcoholic man, caused by Bartonella quintana; the other in a 41 year old male with a history of exposure to cat fleas, caused by B henselae. Serological testing and polymerase chain reaction of the excised valves were used to identify the organisms. False positive serology for chlamydia was detected in one case.

Journal: :Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology 2000
R Santos O Cardoso P Rodrigues J Cardoso J Machado A Afonso F Bacellar E Marston R Proença

Bacillary angiomatosis and bacillary peliosis are opportunistic infections caused by Bartonella henselae and Bartonella quintana, which occur in patients with late-stage infection. We report a case of bacillary angiomatosis in an HIV-infected patient with skin, bone, and probably liver involvement, The identification of the agent (B quintana ) was done by polymerase chain reaction in the skin s...

2004
Satoshi Sakaguchi Ichiki Sato Hiroaki Muguruma Hiroaki Kawano Yoshito Kusuhara Seiji Yano Saburo Sone Tsuneo Uchiyama

largely unknown. Given the existence of Bartonella spp. in every mammal group examined to date, the diversity of the genus is probably much greater than has been observed among the strains examined to date. In Greece, serologic evidence of human infection with B. henselae and B. quintana (8), has been found and a case of B. quintana endocarditis has been established (unpub. data). The public he...

Journal: :Vector borne and zoonotic diseases 2012
Tania Ayllón Pedro Paulo V P Diniz Edward Bealmear Breitschwerdt Alejandra Villaescusa Fernando Rodríguez-Franco Angel Sainz

The role of various vector-borne pathogens as a cause of disease in cats has not been clearly determined. The current study evaluated risk factors, clinical and laboratory abnormalities associated with Ehrlichia spp., Anaplasma spp., Neorickettsia spp., Leishmania spp., and Bartonella spp. infection or exposure in 680 client-owned and stray cats from Madrid, Spain. Our results indicate that a l...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1997
D L Kordick E J Hilyard T L Hadfield K H Wilson A G Steigerwalt D J Brenner E B Breitschwerdt

Shortly after adopting a 6-week-old cat, a veterinarian was bitten on the left index finger. Within 3 weeks, he developed headache, fever, and left axillary lymphadenopathy. Initial blood cultures from the cat and veterinarian were sterile. Repeat cultures from the cat grew Bartonella-like organisms with lophotrichous flagella. Sera from the veterinarian were not reactive against Bartonella hen...

Journal: :Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo 2002
Erick Huarcaya Ciro Maguiña Jenny Merello Jaime Cok Richard Birtles Berónica Infante José Vidal Afilio Tello Palmira Ventosilla

Cat-Scratch Disease (CSD) is a benign lymphadenitis that may progress to severe or recurrent forms, and it is occasionally associated with morbidity. Between January of 1998 and March of 1999, forty-three suspected CSD patients were assessed in the Hospital Cayetano Heredia and the Instituto de Salud del Niño, in Lima, Peru. Twelve patients had a confirmed diagnosis, 8 of whom were women, and t...

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 1991
B B Chomel

Cat-scratch disease (CSD) was first described by Debré in 1950, yet the causative bacterial agent of CSD remained obscure until 1992, when Bartonella (formerly Rochalimaea) henselae was implicated in CSD by serological and microbiological studies. B. henselae had initially been linked to bacillary angiomatosis (BA), a vascular proliferative disease most commonly associated with long-standing hu...

One of the most important species of the Bartonella genus is B. henselae that causes a zoonotic infection, cat scratch disease (CSD). The main source of the bacteria is cat and the carrier is Ctenocephalides felis flea. One hundred and forty nail and saliva samples were collected from 70 domestic cats. Positive samples for B. henselae were characterized by po...

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