Results 211 to 220 of about 91,328 (264)
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Nature Reviews Disease Primers, 2018
Vibrio is a genus of ubiquitous bacteria found in a wide variety of aquatic and marine habitats; of the >100 described Vibrio spp., ~12 cause infections in humans. Vibrio cholerae can cause cholera, a severe diarrhoeal disease that can be quickly fatal if untreated and is typically transmitted via contaminated water and person-to-person contact.
Craig Baker-Austin +2 more
exaly +8 more sources
Vibrio is a genus of ubiquitous bacteria found in a wide variety of aquatic and marine habitats; of the >100 described Vibrio spp., ~12 cause infections in humans. Vibrio cholerae can cause cholera, a severe diarrhoeal disease that can be quickly fatal if untreated and is typically transmitted via contaminated water and person-to-person contact.
Craig Baker-Austin +2 more
exaly +8 more sources
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1989
We report 3 cases of Vibrio vulnificus infections from Taiwan. Patient 1, who manifested symptoms of primary septicemia, died after 2 days. Patient 2, who had a wound infection and signs and symptoms of sepsis but negative blood cultures, responded to tobramycin and chloramphenicol plus surgical debridement, and recovered after 26 days of ...
Y C, Chuang, C D, Young, C W, Chen
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We report 3 cases of Vibrio vulnificus infections from Taiwan. Patient 1, who manifested symptoms of primary septicemia, died after 2 days. Patient 2, who had a wound infection and signs and symptoms of sepsis but negative blood cultures, responded to tobramycin and chloramphenicol plus surgical debridement, and recovered after 26 days of ...
Y C, Chuang, C D, Young, C W, Chen
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Infections with Vibrio vulnificus
Dermatologic Clinics, 2003V. vulnificus is an uncommon cause of soft tissue infection and primary septicemia, especially in patients with hepatic disease or who patients who are immunocompromised. The mortality of infection in these patients is extremely high despite timely antibiotic therapy. It is important to consider the possibility of infection with V.
Michael, Borenstein, Francisco, Kerdel
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New England Journal of Medicine, 2018
Vibrio vulnificus Infection A 71-year-old man presented to the emergency department with fever and left hand pain after eating raw seafood. Surgical wound cultures identified Vibrio vulnificus.
Jin, Park, Chang-Seop, Lee
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Vibrio vulnificus Infection A 71-year-old man presented to the emergency department with fever and left hand pain after eating raw seafood. Surgical wound cultures identified Vibrio vulnificus.
Jin, Park, Chang-Seop, Lee
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Infection due to a “related” Vibrio
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1961Summary 1. A “related” Vibrio was isolated from the blood of an infant with bloody diarrhea. 2. The unusual growth requirements of this organism may have prevented its isolation previously and precluded its association with the disease in human beings. 3.
J N, MIDDELKAMP, H A, WOLF
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Vibrio alginolyticus infections in humans
Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 1979Two clinical isolates of Vibrio alginolyticus from New Jersey are reported, one from a mixed stump infection and the other grown in pure culture from the conjunctival discharge of a man with conjunctivitis. The biochemical characteristics and antibiotic susceptibilities of these two isolates are presented. Human infections caused by V.
U, Schmidt, H, Chmel, C, Cobbs
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1982
To the Editor.— The article entitled "Cholera on the Texas Gulf Coast" (1982;247:1598) failed to make the critical distinction between Vibrio cholerae 01, the cause of epidemic cholera, and non-01 V cholerae , which, until recently, was included in a poorly defined category referred to as nonagglutinating vibrios or non-cholera vibrios. Although these
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To the Editor.— The article entitled "Cholera on the Texas Gulf Coast" (1982;247:1598) failed to make the critical distinction between Vibrio cholerae 01, the cause of epidemic cholera, and non-01 V cholerae , which, until recently, was included in a poorly defined category referred to as nonagglutinating vibrios or non-cholera vibrios. Although these
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Human Infections with Vibrio Fetus and a Closely Related Vibrio
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1957Received for publication March 26, 1957. The author wishes to acknowledge with thanks the help given by Dr. Donald S. Martin in the preparation of this manuscript. the bacteriologic and serologic reactions of V. fetus strains isolated from seven additional human infections.
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Report of a wound infection caused by Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Vibrio vulnificus
Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease, 1986The present case describes a foot wound caused by a clam shell from which both Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Vibrio vulnificus were recovered. Although extraintestinal infections associated with Vibrio parahaemolyticus have been reported previously, the simultaneous isolation of two marine vibrios from our case suggests that these organisms may coexist ...
A A, McMeeking, W J, Codd, B A, Hanna
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Extraintestinal Infections Due to Halophilic Vibrios
Southern Medical Journal, 1983To compare the clinical and epidemiologic features, we reviewed the hospital records and interviewed 18 patients with extraintestinal infections caused by three species of halophilic vibrios. Vibrio vulnificus, the organism most frequently isolated in Virginia during the six-year study period, caused primary septicemia in three patients.
C W, Armstrong, J L, Lake, G B, Miller
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