Results 221 to 230 of about 91,328 (264)
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New England Journal of Medicine, 1960
VIBRIO fetus is an important cause of infectious abortion in cattle and sheep1 , 2: however, reports of human infection are rare. Since this infection was recently observed in 3 patients at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, it was thought worth while to describe these cases and to review the previous literature concerning V. fetus infection in man.
R L, KAHLER, H, SHELDON
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VIBRIO fetus is an important cause of infectious abortion in cattle and sheep1 , 2: however, reports of human infection are rare. Since this infection was recently observed in 3 patients at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, it was thought worth while to describe these cases and to review the previous literature concerning V. fetus infection in man.
R L, KAHLER, H, SHELDON
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A Vibrio Cholerae Infection in a Transient Teamster
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1981An illness indistinguishable clinically from classical cholera but caused by a non-cholera vibrio occurred in an over-the-road truck driver. The infecting organism was not finally identified as Vibrio cholera, Smith serotype 113 toxin positive, until 4 weeks after his hospital discharge.
F F, Holmes +5 more
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Histopathology of Marine Vibrio Wound Infections
American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1981Although marine vibrio wound infections and septicemia are being reported with increasing frequency, description of the histopathologic changes has been scanty. The histologic alterations in three patients with primary marine vibrio wound infections are presented.
E N, Beckman +4 more
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Pacemaker infection due to Vibrio alginolyticus
European Journal of Internal Medicine, 2008We report a case of pacemaker infection due to Vibrio alginolyticus, after exposure to sea water. V. alginolyticus has been seldom responsible for human infections, but may be an emerging pathogen, most of the time implicated in gastroenteritis and skin and soft tissue infections after exposure to sea water.
François, Floch, David, Boutoille
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Hemochromatosis and Vibrio vulnificus Wound Infections
Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology, 2009There are several reports of persons with hemochromatosis and Vibrio vulnificus primary septicemia, but few accounts of persons with hemochromatosis and V. vulnificus wound infection. A 58-year-old white man developed infection of a forearm injury exposed to seawater in the Gulf of Mexico near the Alabama coast.
James C, Barton, Ronald T, Acton
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Vibrio cholerae infection in the embryonated egg
The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1963pathogenicity. Hence, this investigation was motivated only by the hope that the chick embryo might serve as a suitable host in which to detect differences in virulence of strains of cholera vibrios which were not demonstrable in other experimental infections.
E W, GARDNER +3 more
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Vibrio vulnificus Infection in Hawaii
International Journal of Dermatology, 1989ABSTRACT: A life‐threatening Vibrio vulnificus infection occurred in a 52‐year‐old Korean woman with hepatic cirrhosis. Four days after ingesting raw crab, the patient presented to the hospital with nausea, vomiting, fever, hypotension, and hemorrhagic blistering of the left foot. Vibrio vulnificus was recovered from both her blood and a foot wound.
C J, Nip-Sakamoto, F D, Pien
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Virulence determinants for Vibrio parahaemolyticus infection
Current Opinion in Microbiology, 2013Vibrio parahaemolyticus is a marine microorganism that causes acute gastroenteritis associated with the consumption of contaminated raw or under cooked seafood. During infection, the bacterium utilizes a wide variety of virulence factors, including adhesins, toxins and type III secretion systems, to cause both cytotoxicity in cultured cells and ...
Lingling, Zhang, Kim, Orth
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Maryland medical journal (Baltimore, Md. : 1985), 1989
Nonclassical vibrio infections are being better diagnosed because of awareness of them; many of the newer vibrio infections are being better recognized because of more selective culture methods. These infections pose a risk to individuals who play and work in warm coastal waters as well as to those who eat raw or partially cooked seafood.
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Nonclassical vibrio infections are being better diagnosed because of awareness of them; many of the newer vibrio infections are being better recognized because of more selective culture methods. These infections pose a risk to individuals who play and work in warm coastal waters as well as to those who eat raw or partially cooked seafood.
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Vibrio Infections and Rickettsioses: Summary Notes
Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery, 1999The intention of the Summary Notes section is to provide the practitioner and trainee with a current, concise reference source to dermatologic diseases and to serve as a form of Continuing Medical Education. Each installment will deal with a specific disease.
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