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Salmonella Infection (salmonella + infection)
Selected AbstractsMixed Salmonella Infection: Case Report and Review of the LiteratureJOURNAL OF TRAVEL MEDICINE, Issue 2 2007Nelun Perera MRCPath Mixed infection with multiple Salmonella serotypes in the same patient is an unusual finding. We present a case of enteric fever in which both Salmonella Typhi and Salmonella Paratyphi A were isolated from the blood of a patient traveling from India. [source] Effects of an adapted intravenous amiodarone treatment protocol in horses with atrial fibrillationEQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL, Issue 4 2007D. de CLERCQ Summary Reason for performing study: Good results have been obtained with a human amiodarone (AD) i.v. protocol in horses with chronic atrial fibrillation (AF) and a pharmacokinetic study is required for a specific i.v. amiodarone treatment protocol for horses. Objectives: To study the efficacy of this pharmacokinetic based i.v. AD protocol in horses with chronic AF. Methods: Six horses with chronic AF were treated with an adapted AD infusion protocol. The protocol consisted of 2 phases with a loading dose followed by a maintenance infusion. In the first phase, horses received an infusion of 6.52 mg AD/kg bwt/h for 1 h followed by 1.1 mg/kg bwt/h for 47 h. In the second phase, horses received a second loading dose of 3.74 mg AD/kg bwt/h for 1 h followed by 1.31 mg/kg bwt/h for 47 h. Clinical signs were monitored, a surface ECG and an intra-atrial electrogram were recorded. AD treatment was discontinued when conversion or any side effects were observed. Results: Three of the 6 horses cardioverted successfully without side effects. The other 3 horses did not convert and showed adverse effects, including diarrhoea. In the latter, there were no important circulatory problems, but the diarrhoea continued for 10,14 days. The third horse had to be subjected to euthanasia because a concomitant Salmonella infection worsened the clinical signs. Conclusion: The applied treatment protocol based upon pharmacokinetic data achieved clinically relevant concentrations of AD and desethylamiodarone. Potential relevance: Intravenous AD has the potential to be an alternative pharmacological treatment for AF in horses, although AD may lead to adverse drug effects, particularly with cumulative dosing. [source] Survival of Salmonella in bathrooms and toilets in domestic homes following salmonellosisJOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 1 2000J. Barker The survival and environmental spread of Salmonella bacteria from domestic toilets was examined in homes, where a family member had recently suffered an attack of salmonellosis. In four out of six households tested, Salmonella bacteria persisted in the biofilm material found under the recess of the toilet bowl rim which was difficult to remove with household toilet cleaners. In two homes Salmonella bacteria became incorporated into the scaly biofilm adhering to the toilet bowl surface below the water line. Salmonella enteritidis persisted in one toilet for 4 weeks after the diarrhoea had stopped, despite the use of cleaning fluids. Salmonellas were not isolated from normally dry areas such as, the toilet seat, the flush handle and door handle. Toilet seeding experiments were set up with Salmonella enteritidis PT4 to mimic environmental conditions associated with acute diarrhoea. Flushing the toilet resulted in contamination of the toilet seat and the toilet seat lid. In one out of three seedings, Salmonella bacteria were also isolated from an air sample taken immediately after flushing, indicating that airborne spread of the organism could contaminate surfaces in the bathroom. In the seeded toilet Salmonella bacteria were isolated from the biofilm in the toilet bowl below the waterline for up to 50 d after seeding, and also on one occasion from the bowl water. The results suggest that during diarrhoeal illness, there is considerable risk of spread of Salmonella infection to other family members via the environment, including contaminated hands and surfaces in the toilet area. [source] Experimental infection magnifies inbreeding depression in house miceJOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2008P. ILMONEN Abstract It is often assumed that inbreeding reduces resistance to pathogens, yet there are few experimental tests of this idea in vertebrates, and no tests for the effects of moderate levels of inbreeding more commonly found in nature. We mated wild-derived mice with siblings or first cousins and compared the resistance of their offspring to Salmonella infection with outbred controls under laboratory and seminatural conditions. In the laboratory, full-sib inbreeding reduced resistance to Salmonella and survivorship, whereas first-cousin inbreeding had no detectable effects. In competitive population enclosures, we found that first-cousin inbreeding reduced male fitness by 57% in infected vs. only 34% in noninfected control populations. Our study provides experimental evidence that inbreeding reduces resistance and ability to survive pathogenic infection, and moreover, it shows that even moderate inbreeding can cause significant fitness declines under naturalistic conditions of social stress, and especially with exposure to infectious agents. [source] Salmonella infection of an ovarian dermoid cystPEDIATRICS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 2 2001Tadashi Matsubayashi No abstract is available for this article. [source] Toll-like receptor 2 variants are associated with acute reactive arthritisARTHRITIS & RHEUMATISM, Issue 11 2008Florence W. L. Tsui Objective We previously reported a recent outbreak of salmonellosis in which some individuals developed complications of the enteric infection. The objective of this study was to identify genetic variants that might predispose infected individuals to develop articular and/or extraarticular sequelae after Salmonella enteritidis infection. Methods The entire exposed cohort was invited to participate in the study by sending a saliva sample for DNA analysis. Seventy-five Salmonella -infected subjects for whom there was clinical information agreed to participate and were stratified into 4 groups. Group 1 patients had arthritis and extraarticular features, group 2 patients had arthritis alone, group 3 patients had extraarticular features alone, and group 4 patients had neither. DNA samples from an uninfected cohort of 91 normal subjects were also genotyped. Genotyping was performed using 2 Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR-2) (rs5743708 and rs5743704) and 2 TLR-4 (rs4986790 and rs4986791) single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Statistical analyses were carried out using chi-square tests. Results There was no association of TLR-4 exonic variants with any clinical events that were reported as accompanying the Salmonella infection. In contrast, compared with normal controls, one of the rare TLR-2 SNPs (rs5743708, R753Q) was associated with the development of arthritis and extraarticular features (P = 0.015 by chi-square test). The TLR-2 variant 753Q was not detected in any of the infected individuals with an uncomplicated course. Another TLR-2 variant, 631H, was associated with articular symptoms in infected males (P = 0.03 by chi-square test). Conclusion In this outbreak, genetic variants of TLR-2, but not TLR-4, were associated with acute reactive arthritis following infection with S enteritidis. [source] Sorting nexin 3 (SNX3) is a component of a tubular endosomal network induced by Salmonella and involved in maturation of the Salmonella -containing vacuoleCELLULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 9 2010Virginie Braun Summary Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is an intracellular pathogen that grows within a modified endomembrane compartment, the Salmonella -containing vacuole (SCV). Maturation of nascent SCVs involves the recruitment of early endosome markers and the remodelling of phosphoinositides at the membrane of the vacuole, in particular the production of phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate [PI(3)P]. Sorting nexins (SNXs) are a family of proteins characterized by the presence of a phox homology (PX) domain that binds to phosphoinositides and are involved in intracellular trafficking in eukaryotic cells. We therefore studied whether sorting nexins, particularly sorting nexin 3 (SNX3), play a role in Salmonella infection. We found that SNX3 transiently localized to SCVs at early times post invasion (10 min) and presented a striking tubulation phenotype in the vicinity of SCVs at later times (30,60 min). The bacterial effector SopB, which is known to promote PI(3)P production on SCVs, was required for the formation of SNX3 tubules. In addition, RAB5 was also required for the formation of SNX3 tubules. Depletion of SNX3 by siRNA impaired RAB7 and LAMP1 recruitment to the SCV. Moreover, the formation of Salmonella -induced filaments (Sifs) was altered by SNX3 knock-down. Therefore, SNX3 plays a significant role in regulating the maturation of SCVs. [source] MyD88 and IFN-,, differentially control maturation of bystander but not Salmonella -associated dendritic cells or CD11cintCD11b+ cells during infectionCELLULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 7 2008Miguel A. Tam Summary The interface between dendritic cells (DCs) and T cells is critical to elicit effective immunity against pathogens. The maturation state of DCs determines the quality of the interaction and governs the type of response. DCs can be matured directly through activating Toll-like receptors (TLRs) or indirectly by cytokines. We explore the role of the TLR adaptor MyD88 on DC maturation during Salmonella infection. Using Salmonella expressing GFP, we also examine the phenotype and function of bacteria-associated DCs matured in the absence of bacteria-mediated TLR signalling. MyD88 was required for upregulation of CD80 on DCs during infection, whereas CD86 and CD40 were upregulated independently of MyD88, although requiring a higher bacterial burden in the MLN. MyD88-independent upregulation was mediated by IFN-,, produced during infection. In infected MyD88,/,IFN-,,R,/, mice, which lack most bacteria-driven TLR signalling, indirect DC maturation was abolished. In contrast, DCs containing Salmonella upregulated co-stimulatory molecules independently of MyD88 and IFN-,,, revealing a pathway of phenotypic maturation active in infected DCs. However, despite high co-stimulatory molecule expression, Salmonella -containing DCs from MyD88,/, or MyD88,/,IFN-,,R,/, mice had a compromised capacity to activate T cells. Thus, bacterial stimulation of TLRs influences DC function at multiple levels that modulates their capacity to direct antibacterial immunity. [source] Pyroptosis and host cell death responses during Salmonella infectionCELLULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 11 2007Susan L. Fink Summary Salmonella enterica are facultatively intracellular pathogens causing diseases with markedly visible signs of inflammation. During infection, Salmonella interacts with various host cell types, often resulting in death of those cells. Salmonella induces intestinal epithelial cell death via apoptosis, a cell death programme with a notably non-inflammatory outcome. In contrast, macrophage infection triggers caspase-1-dependent proinflammatory programmed cell death, a recently recognized process termed pyroptosis, which is distinguished from other forms of cellular demise by its unique mechanism, features and inflammatory outcome. Rapid macrophage pyroptosis depends on the Salmonella pathogenicity island-1 type III secretion system (T3SS) and flagella. Salmonella dynamically modulates induction of macrophage pyroptosis, and regulation of T3SS systems permits bacterial replication in specialized intracellular niches within macrophages. However, these infected macrophages later undergo a delayed form of caspase-1-dependent pyroptosis. Caspase-1-deficient mice are more susceptible to a number of bacterial infections, including salmonellosis, and pyroptosis is therefore considered a generalized protective host response to infection. Thus, Salmonella -induced pyroptosis serves as a model to understand a broadly important pathway of proinflammatory programmed host cell death: examining this system affords insight into mechanisms of both beneficial and pathological cell death and strategies employed by pathogens to modulate host responses. [source] Dynamics of bacterial growth and distribution within the liver during Salmonella infectionCELLULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 9 2003Mark Sheppard Summary Salmonella enterica causes severe systemic diseases in humans and animals and grows intracellularly within discrete tissue foci that become pathological lesions. Because of its lifestyle Salmonella is a superb model for studying the in vivo dynamics of bacterial distribution. Using multicolour fluorescence microscopy in the mouse typhoid model we have studied the interaction between different bacterial populations in the same host as well as the dynamic evolution of foci of infection in relation to bacterial growth and localization. We showed that the growth of Salmonella in the liver results in the spread of the microorganisms to new foci of infection rather than simply in the expansion of the initial ones. These foci were associated with independently segregating bacterial populations and with low numbers of bacteria in each infected phagocyte. Using fast-growing and slow-growing bacteria we also showed that the increase in the number of infected phagocytes parallels the net rate of bacterial growth of the microorganisms in the tissues These findings suggest a novel mechanism underlying growth of salmonellae in vivo with important consequences for understanding mechanisms of resistance and immunity. [source] Rhabdomyolysis induced by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi bacteraemiaCLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, Issue 7 2004D. T. Fisk Abstract Rhabdomyolysis has been reported infrequently with salmonella infection. Since 1964, there have been at least 22 reports associated with gastroenteritis or bacteraemia. Twenty cases have been associated with non-typhoidal strains of Salmonella, with single reports of Salmonella enterica serovars Paratyphi and Typhi. A second case of typhoid fever associated with rhabdomyolysis was recently diagnosed in Ann Arbor, USA in a traveller returning from an endemic area. Prompt diagnosis and treatment resulted in a good outcome. Salmonella infection should be considered by clinicians as a possibility in the differential diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis. [source] Acute pyelonephritis with renal abscesses and acute renal failure after salmonella infectionACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 3 2010RR Rus Abstract Urinary tract infections, renal abscess formation and acute renal failure (ARF) after salmonella infection are rarely reported in children. We present a previously healthy teenager who developed ARF with renal abscess formation after salmonella infection, in whom we believe that acute salmonella pyelonephritis was the main causative factor for ARF and not dehydration, shock or rhabdomyolysis, which have already been described in the literature. With prolonged antibiotic treatment and adequate hydration, the boy's condition improved, but chronic kidney disease was unfortunately inevitable. Conclusion:, Salmonella pyelonephritis has, according to our knowledge, not yet been described to be the main causative factor of ARF in previously healthy children, as was the case in our patient. Long-term antibiotic treatment of at least 6 weeks is probably a must in such patients, even though chronic kidney disease could not have been prevented. [source] Rhabdomyolysis induced by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi bacteraemiaCLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, Issue 7 2004D. T. Fisk Abstract Rhabdomyolysis has been reported infrequently with salmonella infection. Since 1964, there have been at least 22 reports associated with gastroenteritis or bacteraemia. Twenty cases have been associated with non-typhoidal strains of Salmonella, with single reports of Salmonella enterica serovars Paratyphi and Typhi. A second case of typhoid fever associated with rhabdomyolysis was recently diagnosed in Ann Arbor, USA in a traveller returning from an endemic area. Prompt diagnosis and treatment resulted in a good outcome. Salmonella infection should be considered by clinicians as a possibility in the differential diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis. [source] |