Results 271 to 280 of about 3,394,061 (333)
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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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Challenges in Vibrio parahaemolyticus infections caused by the pandemic clone.
Future Microbiology, 2019Vibrio Parahaemolyticus infections caused by the pandemic clone have become a global public health issue. The pandemic clone includes over ten sequence types and 49 serotypes.
Dongsheng Han +4 more
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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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Vibrio Infections and the Twenty-First Century.
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 2023S. Almagro-Moreno +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
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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Freshwater Non-O1 Vibrio cholerae Infection
Southern Medical Journal, 2010It is not appreciated by most physicians that vibrio infections can be acquired from freshwater exposure. A case of non-O1 Vibrio cholerae urinary tract infection associated with freshwater exposure is reported. The potential for vibrios to grow in brachish water and for summer heat to cause evaporation leading to relative increased salinity in ...
Eric, Walker +3 more
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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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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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Wound Infection Associated with Vibrio alginolyticus
American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1979A 42-year-old man had an infected ulcerated lesion of the anterior aspect of the right lower extremity. Vibrio alginolyticus was twice isolated from the lesion. Emphasis is placed on the clinical and laboratory characteristics of this organism and its differentiation from other halophilic vibrios.
M, Pezzlo, P J, Valter, M J, Burns
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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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