Results 131 to 140 of about 12,722 (179)
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Aeromonas hydrophila upper extremity infection
The Journal of Hand Surgery, 1989A severe soft tissue infection of the upper extremity caused by Aeromonas hydrophila followed a water skiing injury in which a tow rope caused degloving of a portion of the skin and severe contusion to underlying muscle. Infection was established within 36 hours of the injury, accompanied by fever, leukocytosis, and a foul odor.
J R, Sanger, N J, Yousif, H S, Matloub
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EXOTOXlNS OF AEROMONAS HYDROPHILA
Australian Journal of Experimental Biology and Medical Science, 1981SummaryEighty of 103 strains of Aeromonas hydrophila cultured at 100 rev./min produced heat‐labile enterotoxins detected using the suckling mouse assay. Results in intestinal perfusion agreed with the suckling mouse test in all strains tested by both methods.
V, Burke +5 more
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Cytotonic enterotoxin from Aeromonas hydrophila
Toxicon, 1982Aeromonas hydrophila produces two hemolysins and an enterotoxin during growth. Enterotoxin, separated from the hemolysins, gave positive reactions in the rabbit intestinal loop test, the rabbit skin test and the adrenal Y1 cell test. Neutralization experiments in the rabbit loop, rabbit skin and Y1 cell tests failed to demonstrate any immunological ...
A, Ljungh, P, Eneroth, T, Wadström
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Posttraumatic Aeromonas hydrophila Osteomyelitis
Archives of Internal Medicine, 1983• Aeromonas hydrophila is a gram-negative organism that is the causative agent in several clinical infections. Although it has been reported to cause osteomyelitis in immunocompromised patients, it has not been reported to cause this in the normal host. We describe two patients in whom acute osteomyelitis developed following trauma in freshwater lakes.
G H, Karam, A M, Ackley, W E, Dismukes
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Aeromonas hydrophila in burn patients
Burns, 1998Burn wound infection with Aeromonas hydrophila appears to be very uncommon. This study reports on nine cases of A. hydrophila in burn patients treated over a 21 month period at the New Somerset Hospital Burn Unit. The average age of the patients was 31 years (range 24-60 years) and the average TBSA was 33% (range 16-51%).
P J, Skoll, D A, Hudson, J A, Simpson
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Aeromonas hydrophila Infection
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1978To the Editor. — In the article "Freshwater Wound Infection Due to Aeromonas hydrophila " (238:1053, 1977), Hanson et al comment that A hydrophila may be a more frequent human pathogen than the literature would suggest. The following two cases seen in August 1977 in Mercy Hospital, a 200-bed community hospital, support this suggestion and point out ...
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Aeromonas hydrophila bacteremia
Clinical Microbiology Newsletter, 1988Abstract This patient with septicemia caused by Aeromonas hydrophila demonstrates clinical features similar to those of patients in previous reports. Particularly interesting were the skin lesions that appeared at the time of onset of septicemia. It has been shown that these bacteria have particular affinity for muscle tissue, causing necrosis and ...
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Prevalence and Pathogenicity of Aeromonas hydrophila
Avian Diseases, 1985A field survey to determine the prevalence of Aeromonas hydrophila revealed a recovery rate of 8% in 141 specimens derived from a range of live, companion, and exotic avian species. The prevalence rate was similar in 240 sequential postmortem submissions during 1984. Studies on the pathogenicity of A.
S M, Shane, D H, Gifford
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Multiresistant Aeromonas hydrophila bacteremia
Enfermedades infecciosas y microbiologia clinica (English ed.), 2023Iker, Alonso-González +2 more
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Quorum Sensing Regulation in Aeromonas hydrophila
Journal of Molecular Biology, 2010We present detailed results on the C4-HSL-mediated quorum sensing (QS) regulatory system of the opportunistic Gram-negative bacterium Aeromonas hydrophila. This bacterium contains a particularly simple QS system that allows for a detailed modeling of kinetics. In a model system (i.e., the Escherichia coli monitor strain MH205), the C4-HSL production of
Garde, Christian +8 more
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