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A Non-Cholera Vibrio Resembling the True Cholera Vibrio and a Pigment-Forming Vibrio
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1914a marked resemblance in many respects to the Koch vibrio, but have failed to answer to all the requirements, failing always in the agglutination and bacteriolytic tests and some in being hemolytic and possessing more than one flagellum. In some of these cases in observing the marked similarity the question has arisen whether these vibrios may not be ...
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Vibrio cholerae, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, and Vibrio vulnificus
2018Although cholera is considered an old-world disease, it continues to be a serious problem in developing and economically impoverished countries. The infections caused by other vibrios are also increasing worldwide especially in developed countries and are increasingly being recognized as emerging diseases.
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2014 
Publisher Summary The members of the genus Vibrio are: short, bent rods, sometimes almost straight; motile by means of a single polar flagellum; aerobes, growing well on ordinary media; frequently liquefy gelatin; do not form spores; Gram-negative; some species are pathogenic to man and animals.
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Publisher Summary The members of the genus Vibrio are: short, bent rods, sometimes almost straight; motile by means of a single polar flagellum; aerobes, growing well on ordinary media; frequently liquefy gelatin; do not form spores; Gram-negative; some species are pathogenic to man and animals.
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Vibrio cholerae and Vibrio parahaemolyticus
2017Margarete Midori Okazaki +5 more
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1981 
The problems of immunization against the cholera vibrios and the disease cholera, for which they are responsible, can best be appreciated using Fig. 1 as a frame of reference. The figure, kindly provided by Dr. Edward T. Nelson (Nelson et al., 1976), is a scanning electron micrograph of Vibrio cholerae organisms, magnified approximately 5000 times ...
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The problems of immunization against the cholera vibrios and the disease cholera, for which they are responsible, can best be appreciated using Fig. 1 as a frame of reference. The figure, kindly provided by Dr. Edward T. Nelson (Nelson et al., 1976), is a scanning electron micrograph of Vibrio cholerae organisms, magnified approximately 5000 times ...
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Chironomids and Vibrio cholerae
2011Chironomids (non-biting midges) are the most widely dispersed freshwater insects. Females deposit egg masses at the water’s edge, each egg mass contains hundreds of eggs embedded in a gelatinous matrix. They undergo complete metamorphosis of four life stages: eggs, larvae, pupae, and adults. Non O1/O139 serogroups of V.
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