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Pasteurella multocida

Pediatrics In Review, 2019
Open the mouth of most dogs or cats and you will likely find the bacterium Pasteurella multocida. This nonmotile, non–spore-forming, gram-negative coccobacillus is part of normal animal respiratory flora and, therefore, is a common cause of wound ...
Leora, Mogilner, Cynthia, Katz
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Pasteurella multocida

Schlossberg's Clinical Infectious Disease, 2015
This chapter focuses on Pasteurella multocida, which translates to “killer of many species” and is a nonmotile, gram-negative, facultative coccobacillus best known for its association with soft-tissue infections after animal bites.
Paulina A. Rebolledo   +2 more
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Pasteurella multocida

2021
This chapter focuses on Pasteurella multocida, which translates to “killer of many species” and is a nonmotile, gram-negative, facultative coccobacillus best known for its association with soft-tissue infections after animal bites. It examines P. multocida as an opportunistic pathogen that is capable of causing invasive and life-threatening infections.
Andrew S. Webster   +3 more
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Pasteurella multocida Epiglottitis

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1997
Pasteurella multocida, a small gram-negative coccobacillus, colonizes the nasopharynx and gastrointestinal tract of many animals, including cats and dogs. Most human infections with P multocida are due to animal bites, but the respiratory tract is the second most common site of infection.
N, Wine, Y, Lim, J, Fierer
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Pasteurella multocida Infections with Unusual Modes of Transmission from Animals to Humans: A Study of 79 Cases with 34 Nonbite Transmissions

Vector Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, 2020
Pasteur discovered the causative agent of fowl cholera (Pasteurella multocida) in 1880. Since then, multiple zoonotic infections affecting humans have been reported. P. multocida infections usually result from bites of cats or dogs.
D. Kannangara, D. Pandya, P. Patel
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Pasteurella multocida Endocarditis

American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1992
Human infection with Pasteurella multocida is the leading cause of animal bite wound infection. Life-threatening infection may occur in patients with a variety of underlying disorders and an immunocompromised state. Infective endocarditis with P. multocida is very rare and only a few clinically diagnosed cases have been reported.
S M, Hombal, H P, Dincsoy
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Pasteurella multocida pleural empyema

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1978
RESPIRATOR Y INFECTIONS caused by Pasteurella multocida, specifically pneumonia and empyema, have been amply described in adults.>" This organism has been responsible for disease in extrapulmonary sites as well.': In children, however, infections with -P.
R I, Goldenberg   +4 more
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Posttraumatic Pasteurella multocida Meningitis

Southern Medical Journal, 1988
The patient described was immunologically compromised by multisystem trauma. Pasteurella multocida was isolated from the respiratory tract and subsequently from the cerebrospinal fluid; direct spread apparently occurred by way of a basilar skull fracture. Sepsis was absent.
S R, Roberts, J W, Esther, J H, Brewer
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Acute Pasteurella multocida pneumonia

British Journal of Diseases of the Chest, 1977
Acute pneumonia caused by Pasteurella multocida appeared in two elderly patients. One patient had chronic obstructive lung disease and the other developed aspiration pneumonia after an episode of cardiac arrest. Pasteurella multocida was not isolated from the initial sputum cultures.
H D, Rose, G, Mathai
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Pathogenomics of Pasteurella multocida

2012
The first complete genome sequence of the P. multocida avian isolate Pm70 was reported in 2001. Analysis of the genome identified many predicted virulence genes, including two encoding homologues of the Bordetella pertussis filamentous haemagluttinins, and genes involved in iron transport and metabolism.
J D, Boyce   +3 more
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