نتایج جستجو برای: anthrax spore

تعداد نتایج: 13072  

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2007
Aurélie Cleret Anne Quesnel-Hellmann Alexandra Vallon-Eberhard Bernard Verrier Steffen Jung Dominique Vidal Jacques Mathieu Jean-Nicolas Tournier

Inhalational anthrax is a life-threatening infectious disease of considerable concern, especially because anthrax is an emerging bioterrorism agent. The exact mechanisms leading to a severe clinical form through the inhalational route are still unclear, particularly how immobile spores are captured in the alveoli and transported to the lymph nodes in the early steps of infection. We investigate...

2016
Brent J. Yamamoto Annette M. Shadiack Sarah Carpenter Daniel Sanford Lisa N. Henning Nestor Gonzales Edward O'Connor Leslie S. Casey Natalya V. Serbina

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend adjunctive antitoxins when systemic anthrax is suspected. Obiltoxaximab, a monoclonal antibody against protective antigen (PA), is approved for treatment of inhalational anthrax in combination with antibiotics and for prophylaxis when alternative therapies are not available. The impact of toxin neutralization with obiltoxaximab during pre...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2004
Alison K Pickering Manuel Osorio Gloria M Lee Vanessa K Grippe Mechelle Bray Tod J Merkel

Bacillus anthracis, the etiological agent of anthrax, is a gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium. The inhalational form of anthrax is the most severe and is associated with rapid progression of the disease and the outcome is frequently fatal. Transfer from the respiratory epithelium to regional lymph nodes appears to be an essential early step in the establishment of infection. This transfer i...

2011
Zhaochun Chen Mahtab Moayeri Robert Purcell

Anthrax is a highly lethal infectious disease caused by the spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. It not only causes natural infection in humans but also poses a great threat as an emerging bioterror agent. The lethality of anthrax is primarily attributed to the two major virulence factors: toxins and capsule. An extensive effort has been made to generate therapeutically useful monoclonal...

Journal: :Medical Immunology 2005
Julia Y Wang Michael H Roehrl

The successful use of Bacillus anthracis as a lethal biological weapon has prompted renewed research interest in the development of more effective vaccines against anthrax. The disease consists of three critical components: spore, bacillus, and toxin, elimination of any of which confers at least partial protection against anthrax. Current remedies rely on postexposure antibiotics to eliminate b...

2017
Matthias A. Oberli Tim Horlacher Daniel B. Werz Peter H. Seeberger

Bacillus anthracis is a Gram-positive, spore-forming soil bacterium that is closely related to Bacillus cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis. Infections with Bacillus anthracis result in a disease called anthrax (Mock and Fouet 2001; Sylvestre et al. 2002). Anthrax is primarily an infection of grazing cattle. Ingested spores germinate within the host to the vegetative form. Vegetative cells multip...

Journal: :World journal of clinical cases 2015
Ajay Kumar Goel

Bioterrorism has received a lot of attention in the first decade of this century. Biological agents are considered attractive weapons for bioterrorism as these are easy to obtain, comparatively inexpensive to produce and exhibit widespread fear and panic than the actual potential of physical damage. Bacillus anthracis (B. anthracis), the etiologic agent of anthrax is a Gram positive, spore form...

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 2002
M E Hugh-Jones V de Vos

Although livestock anthrax is declining in many parts of the world, with an increasing number of countries probably truly free of the disease, anthrax remains enzootic in many national parks and even in some game ranching areas. These infected areas can present a persistent risk to surrounding livestock, which may otherwise be free of the disease, as well as a public health risk. The authors us...

2013
Sarah A. Jenkins Yi Xu

Pulmonary exposure to Bacillus anthracis spores initiates inhalational anthrax, a life-threatening infection. It is known that dormant spores can be recovered from the lungs of infected animals months after the initial spore exposure. Consequently, a 60-day course antibiotic treatment is recommended for exposed individuals. However, there has been little information regarding details or mechani...

2013
Norah E. Palmateer Vivian D. Hope Kirsty Roy Andrea Marongiu Joanne M. White Kathie A. Grant Colin N. Ramsay David J. Goldberg Fortune Ncube

Since 2000 in the United Kingdom, infections caused by spore-forming bacteria have been associated with increasing illness and death among persons who inject drugs (PWID). To assess temporal and geographic trends in these illnesses (botulism, tetanus, Clostridium novyi infection, and anthrax), we compared rates across England and Scotland for 2000-2009. Overall, 295 infections were reported: 1....

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