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Streptococcus mitis Endocarditis

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1986
Seventeen patients with Streptococcus mitis endocarditis were treated at a municipal hospital over a three-year period. Thirteen patients were intravenous drug addicts. Streptococcus mitis has a predilection for right-sided endocarditis in intravenous drug addicts and left-sided endocarditis in non-drug addicts.
Kevin B. Rapeport   +2 more
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Antigenic composition of the cell wall of Streptococcus mitis

Archives of Oral Biology, 1965
Abstract Streptococcus mitis, previously described as a serologically unclassifiable species, has been serologically grouped by the cell wall agglutination method. The three ATCC strains and thirty-three oral strains of Strep. mitis were divided into two serological groups.
A.N. Bahn, Irene V. Kalonaros
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ION INTERACTIONS IN THE AGGREGATION OF STREPTOCOCCUS MITIS

Acta Pathologica Microbiologica Scandinavica Series B: Microbiology, 1983
Spontaneous aggregation of Streptococcus mitis ATCC 903 was highly dependent on various electrolytes such as sodium chloride, sodium phosphate or potassium phosphate with an optimum at 10 mM concentration. No aggregation was obtained in distilled water.
Saleem Abaas, Tord Holme
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Metabolism of the reserve polysaccharide of Streptococcus mitis

Carbohydrate Research, 1969
Abstract A maltodextrin phosphorylase found in cell extracts of several strains of Streptococcus mitis has been purified and freed from several other enzymes concerned with glycogen synthesis and degradation. Maltodextrins were the best primers for the synthetic reaction; glycogen was a poor primer for this phosphorylase.
Alexandra Lavrova   +2 more
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The production of beta-glucuronidase and hyaluronidase by streptococcus mitis

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1954
Abstract 1. 1. Microorganisms, isolated from human saliva, carious dentine, and periodontal pockets, which produced both beta-glucuronidase and hyaluronidase were alpha hemolytic streptococci, Streptococcus mitis . 2. 2. The finding of three different strains of Streptococcus mitis is reported. 3. 3.
P.L. Lorina   +2 more
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Retroperitoneal Abscess Caused by Streptococcus mitis

Infectious Diseases in Clinical Practice, 2016
Abstract Retroperitoneal abscess is an uncommon infection that is associated with high morbidity. Early diagnosis is imperative; however, due to its insidious onset and subtle presentation, the diagnosis is often missed. We report a case of a retroperitoneal abscess caused by Streptococcus mitis which is usually not implicated as a serious ...
Alexander Palesty   +3 more
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Synthesis of intracellular iodophilic polysaccharide by Streptococcus mitis

Archives of Oral Biology, 1963
Abstract The synthesis of iodine-staining polysaccharide from glucose has been studied using a strain of Streptococcus mitis . Polysaccharide was shown to be intra-cellular, and to be a polymer composed solely of glucose linked in part by alpha 1, 4 glucosidic bonds. During exponential growth, the organism was found to synthesize polysaccharide at a
R.J. Gibbons, Barbara Kapsimalis
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Pyogenic liver abscess caused by Streptococcus mitis

The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2013
A 68-year-old woman with a history of well controlled asthma presented to the hospital emergency department after 4 days of fever and non-bloody diarrhoea. Dietary history was relevant only for a meal at a local steakhouse that contained cooked fi sh 5 days before admission.
David DiBardino, Jay F. Sarthy
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Trimethylsilyl‐sugar profiles of Streptococcus milleri and Streptococcus mitis

Journal of Applied Bacteriology, 1983
Seventy strains of ‘viridans‐group’ streptococci were analysed gas chromatographically after preparation of trimethylsilyl ethers of their cellular sugars. The resulting profiles were evaluated as a possible aid to taxonomy. Glycerol, glucose, galactose, N‐acetyl‐glucosamine and N‐acetylmuramic acid were found in all strains, in varying amounts ...
H.S. Aluyi, David B. Drucker
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Localization of intracellular polysaccharide granules in Streptococcus mitis

Archives of Oral Biology, 1967
Abstract The accumulation of an intracellular glycogen-like polysaccharide was studied by electron microscopy in a strain of Streptococcus mitis which can store up to 50 per cent of its dry weight as intracellular polysaccharide. Storage of polysaccharide was reflected by an increase in the number but not the size of distinct cytoplasmic granules ...
J. Nalbandian, K.S. Berman, R.J. Gibbons
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