Results 181 to 190 of about 35,540 (228)
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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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Transmission of Aeromonas hydrophila by leeches
The Lancet, 2013On July 1, 2012, a 47-year-old man sustained a crush injury of the left hand and was admitted to the Hand Emergency Unit, Conception Hospital, Marseille Public Hospitals, Marseille, France, with a large palmar skin defect. Emergency reconstruction of the palmar wound was done with a radial forearm fl ap.
Catherine, Sartor +3 more
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AEROMONAS HYDROPHILA NECROTIZING FASCIITIS
The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-American Volume, 2006We present the case of a patient involving a rare combination of events. A nonimmunocompromised patient who was in a motorcycle collision and came into contact with stagnant water became septic within twenty-four hours after the injury and had a severe necrotizing fasciitis develop because of contamination of an open fracture of the leg.
B L S, Borger van der Burg +2 more
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Aeromonas hydrophila Colitis in a Child
Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, 1984A 5‐year‐old girl presented with chronic bloody diarrhea. Evaluation including sigmoidoscopy, rectal biopsy, and barium enema was consistent with the diagnosis of ulcerative colitis. Culture of the stool grew Aeromonas hydrophila. A. hydrophila colitis may be more common than presently realized.
F, Marsik, S L, Werlin
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Enterotoxigenic Aeromonas hydrophila and diarrhoea in adults
Medical Journal of Australia, 1983Aeromonas hydrophila was isolated from the faeces of 32 patients during a nine month period in three hospitals in Western Australia. All 32 isolates produced enterotoxin which was detected by the suckling-mouse test, and all patients except one had diarrhoea.
C S, Goodwin +5 more
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Purification and characterization of an Aeromonas hydrophila hemolysin
Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 1986A hemolysin produced by Aeromonas hydrophila CA-11, isolated from an environmental source, was purified by sulfopropyl-Sephadex C-25 chromatography at pH 5.0. This hemolysin caused fluid accumulation in infant mouse intestines and rabbit intestinal loops and killed Vero cells, as did the hemolysin produced by strain AH-1, isolated from a diarrheal case.
T, Asao +6 more
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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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Pneumonia and Bacteremia due to Aeromonas hydrophila
Chest, 1981Aeromonas hydrophila is a gram-negative bacillus which has been rarely identified as a human pathogen except in immunologically compromised hosts. We have recently treated three patients for severe A hydrophila pneumonia and sepsis. Two of these patients were healthy young men who aspirated the organism from contaminated water associated with near ...
H D, Reines, F V, Cook
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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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