نتایج جستجو برای: serogroup b

تعداد نتایج: 902654  

Journal: :BMC Infectious Diseases 2006
Chien-Shun Chiou Jui-Cheng Liao Tsai-Ling Liao Chun-Chin Li Chen-Ying Chou Hsiu-Li Chang Shu-Man Yao Yeong-Sheng Lee

BACKGROUND Meningococcal disease is infrequently found in Taiwan, a country with 23 million people. Between 1996 and 2002, 17 to 81 clinical cases of the disease were reported annually. Reported cases dramatically increased in 2001-2002. Our record shows that only serogroup B and W135 meningococci have been isolated from patients with meningococcal disease until 2000. However, serogroup A, C an...

Journal: :Communicable diseases intelligence quarterly report 2014
Monica M Lahra Rodney P Enriquez

In 2013, there were 143 laboratory-confirmed cases of invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) analysed by the Australian National Neisseria Network (NNN). This was the lowest number of laboratory confirmed IMD cases referred to the NNN since the inception of the Australian Meningococcal Surveillance Programme in 1994. Probable and laboratory confirmed IMD is notifiable in Australia. There were 149...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2012
Mignon du Plessis Chivonne Moodley Kedibone M Mothibeli Azola Fali Keith P Klugman Anne von Gottberg

In South Africa, serogroup B meningococcal disease is sporadic. The aim of this study was to characterize serogroup B strains causing invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) in South Africa from 2005 to 2008. Isolates, collected through a national, laboratory-based surveillance program for IMD, were characterized by multilocus sequence typing (MLST). Two thousand two hundred thirty-four cases were...

2015
Christopher B. Sullivan Mathew A. Diggle Robert L. Davies Stuart C. Clarke

Meningococcal disease remains a public health burden in the UK and elsewhere. Invasive Neisseria meningitidis, isolated in Scotland between 1972 and 1998, were characterised retrospectively to examine the serogroup and clonal structure of the circulating population. 2607 isolates causing invasive disease were available for serogroup and MLST analysis whilst 2517 were available for multilocus se...

Journal: :Communicable diseases intelligence quarterly report 2002
Dave Harley Jeffrey N Hanna Susan L Hills John R Bates Helen V Smith

This study describes all episodes of invasive meningococcal disease (n=120) acquired in north Queensland over the 5 year period 1995 to 1999. Indigenous people had a 3-fold greater risk than others of acquiring invasive meningococcal disease. There were 7 deaths, six in non-indigenous people. The majority (72.4%) of identified isolates were serogroup B. We found no evidence of significant resis...

Journal: :Communicable diseases intelligence quarterly report 2011
Monica M Lahra Rodney P Enriquez

In 2012, there were 208 laboratory-confirmed cases of invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) analysed by the National Neisseria Network, and 222 cases notified to the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System, thus laboratory data were available for 93.7% of cases of IMD in Australia in 2012. Isolates of Neisseria meningitidis from 116 invasive cases of meningococcal disease were available...

2003
Alexandre Sampaio Moura Ariel Pablos-Méndez Marcelle Layton Don Weiss

Study of the epidemiologic trends in meningococcal disease is important in understanding infection dynamics and developing timely and appropriate public health interventions. We studied surveillance data from the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, which showed that during 1989-2000 a decrease occurred in both the proportion of patients with serogroup B infection (from 28% to...

2014
Ava Behrouzi Saeid Bouzari Seyed Davar Siadat Shiva Irani

Neisseria meningitidis is a major causative agent of bacterial septicemia and meningitis in humans. Currently, there are no vaccines to prevent disease caused by strains of N.meningitidis serogroup B. The Class 1 Outer Membrane Protein (OMP) has been named porA which is a cation selective transmembrane protein of 45 KDa that forms trimeric pore in the meningococcal outer membrane. PorA from ser...

Journal: :Clinical microbiology reviews 1994
J Diaz Romero I M Outschoorn

Meningococcal meningitis is a severe, life-threatening infection for which no adequate vaccine exists. Current vaccines, based on the group-specific capsular polysaccharides, provide short-term protection in adults against serogroups A and C but are ineffective in infants and do not induce protection against group B strains, the predominant cause of infection in western countries, because the p...

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