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Query: UMLS:C0009450 (infectious diseases)
83,438 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In February 1979 a 51 year old man fell will in Munich, displaying symptoms of an influenza-like illness which developed into pneumonia. The patient died eight days later of circulatory collapse which failed to respond to treatment, accompanied by high temperature, leucopenia and agranulocytosis. Typical rods detected in the lung tissue and histological sections by immunofluorescence indicated the possibility of a Legionella pneumophila infection. The pathogen isolated from the lung tissue on CYE agar was identified as L. pneumophila, serogroup I. The diagnosis was confirmed by the CDC, Atlanta. This is the first time this organism has been isolated in Central Europe from a case with a fatal outcome.
Infection 1979
PMID:[Legionnaires' disease in Germany (author's transl)]. 47 55

In 1976, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease sponsored a nationwide network for influenza surveillance. In this paper, in addition to reporting the surveillance findings in Los Angeles, sales of nonprescription cold remedies in a large supermarket chain were evaluated as an indicator of influenza activity in the community. Twenty-seven isolates of influenza B occurred between February 17 and April 26, 1977. Peak influenza B activity occurred from mid-March to early April, 1977. A 5-10% increase in percent of respiratory and febrile respiratory illness seen in outpatient clinics was observed in late December and January. No variation in these statistics occurred during the peak of influenza activity. In contrast, sales of nonprescription cold remedies were apparently influenced by influenza B activity. Peak sales (345% increase) occurred 4 wk after the first influenza B isolate and 1 wk before peak influenza activity was documented by peak rates of isolation.
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PMID:Sales of nonprescription cold remedies: a unique method of influenza surveillance. 50 53

The resistance of a total of 13 different viruses to some important chemico-physical influences was studied under uniform experimental conditions. Stability in tape water, thermostability and sensitivity to anodic oxidation, gamma radiation, some virucidal substances and several commercial disinfectants were tested. In evaluating the results, an attempt is made to rank the viruses investigated according to their sensitivity. On average a bovine parvovirus, and also a reovirus and three enteroviruses, proved most stable. These were followed by infectious canine hepatitis (adenoviruses). Newcastle disease (paramyxoviruses) and vaccinia (poxviruses) demonstrating less resistance. In all the tests an orthomyxovirus (influenza A), a rhabdovirus (vesicular stomatitis), and particularly a herpesvirus (pseudorabies) and a togavirus (sindbis) proved to have relatively low resistance.
Infection 1979
PMID:[Variations in resistance of viruses from different groups to chemico-physical decontamination methods]. 51 42

After swallowing a non-sterilised pH electrode a 25-year-old medical student developed an influenza-like illness followed by hypo- and achlorhydria for several weeks, acute leukocyte-gastrititis, and epithelial defects of the antrum. This possibly represents an infectious disease which can be transmitted by contaminated electrodes or probes.
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PMID:[Hypochlorhydria in acute gastritis (author's transl)]. 52 Jan 76

The effect of mouse-adapted influenza A/PR/8/34 virus on pulmonary macrophage function was evaluated by using an in vitro system which allowed direct virus interaction with macrophages and then separate analysis of the steps required for bacterial clearance by macrophages. Infection of macrophages with this virus resulted in the appearance of a hemagglutinating activity on the macrophage surface; expression of this activity was inhibited by amantadine, 2-deoxyglucose, and cycloheximide and by pretreatment of the virus inoculum with ultraviolet light and specific antiserum. Since there was no release of extracellular virus, this growth cycle appeared to be incomplete (abortive). After influenza infection, net ingestion of viable Staphylococcus aureus by macrophage monolayers was unaltered and there was no change in the fraction of the monolayer which ingested cocci over a wide range of bacterial inputs. Influenza-infected macrophages also inactivated intracellular S. aureus at a rate indistinguishable from controls. Therefore, these in vitro studies do not support the hypothesis that the defect in pulmonary antibacterial mechanisms associated with influenza infections results from a direct effect of virus infection on either the phagocytic or bactericidal activity of resident pulmonary macrophages.
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PMID:Effect of influenza infection on the phagocytic and bactericidal activities of pulmonary macrophages. 54 91

The effect of sub-lethal doses of influenza A strains WSN (H0N1), MEL (H0N1) and MRC-7 (H3N2) administered intranasally during pregnancy was studied in C3H inbred and Prince Henry outbred mice. Maternal and neonatal mortality rates were significantly increased by infections in the last third of the gestational period. Infection with influenza strain WSN in the last part of the first third of the gestational period significantly depressed the growth rate of neonates. No evidence of viraemia, transplacental transmission or congenital malformations were observed. Invasion of alveolar spaces by mononuclear phagocytes and erythrocytes was more pronounced in pregnant mice infected in the last third of the gestational period than in non-pregnant mice, and paralleled an ablation of cell-mediated immune responsiveness.
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PMID:Influenza A virus and its influence on the outcome of pregnancy in the mouse. 60 35

Thirty-two volunteers 25 years of age or older who were employees of the Laboratory of Infectious Diseases (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, Md.) were given 400 chick cell-agglutinating units of influenza A/New Jersey/76 virus vaccine (Wyeth Laboratories, Philadelphia, Pa.) intramuscularly. Sera were assayed for hemagglutination-inhibiting (HAI) and neutralizing antibody before and after inoculation. All 32 subjects had a fourfold rise in titer of HAI antibody, and 25 of 32 had a similar rise in titer of neutralizing antibody. The average log2 rise was 4.5 for HAI antibody and 4.1 for neutralizing antibody. Therefore, this vaccine is believed to be capable of stimulating HAI and neutralizing antibodies to an equal extent.
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PMID:Comparison of the hemagglutination-inhibiting and neutralizing antibody responses of volunteers given 400 chick cell-agglutinating units of influenza A/New Jersey/76 split-virus vaccine. 60 69

Reactogenicity and antibody responses of high-risk children and adolescents (aged three to 18 years) to bivalent influenza A/Victoria/75-A/New Jersey/76 virus vaccine from nine participating centers were compared to the response of the total population of vaccinees in the multicenter study of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Split-product vaccines given in two doses four weeks apart offered protection without a significant risk of side effects. Patients with chronic pulmonary disease did not differ from the total study population to antibody response or reactivity to vaccination with A/New Jersey strains.
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PMID:Reactivity and antibody response to vaccination with bivalent influenza A/Victoria/75-A/New Jersey/76 vaccines in children with chronic pulmonary diseases. 60 86

A biomedical survey was carried out in North Samar Province, Philipines to update information on the prevalence of parasitic and other infectious diseases. A total of 1,394 stool specimens, 1,859 blood smears and 1,274 sera were collected from persons living in 8 barrios. Stools were examined for intestinal parasites, bloods smears for malaria and filariasis and sera tested for antibodies to Schistosoma japonicum, Entamoeba histolytica, Toxoplasma gondii, influenza A and B, and Japanese encephalitis virus. The prevalence rates for intestinal parasites were: Trichuris trichiura 90%, Ascaris lumbricoides 78%, hookworm 65%, Schistosoma japonicum 15%, Strongyloides stercoralis 1%, Entamoeba coli 16%, Endolimax nana 6%, entamoeba histolytica 5%, Giardia lamblia 3%, Entaemoeba hartmanii 1%, Chilomastix mesnili 1%. No malaria was found but microfilariae of Wuchereria bancrofti were detected in 4% of the blood smears; the MfD50 was 12.9. The circumoval precipitin test (COPT) was used to detect antibodies to Schistosoma japonicum and 65% of 994 sera was considered positive. The indirect hemagglutination test (IHA) was used for detecting antibodies to Entamoeba histolytica and Toxoplasma gondii and 5% and 3% of 1,274 sera tested were positive at titers equal to or greater than 1:128 and 1:256, respectively. Hemagglutination inhibition tests (HI) were used to detect antibodies to Influenza A2HK68, Influenza A2HK68, Influenza B2T62 and Japanese encephalitis virus and 72%, 12% and 78%, respectively, of 1201 sera were considered positive at titers equal to or greater than 1:20.
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PMID:Biomedical survey in North Samar Province, Philippine Islands. 61 7

To establish whether immunity to influenza infection in the ferret is local or systemic, two sites of challenge were utilized: the nose and the anatomically isolated tracheal pouch. Infection of either site did not spread to the other site, and challenge of either site resulted in seroconversion by 13 days. Simultaneous challenge of both sites 21 days after the primary infection revealed that prior infection of the pouch prevented subsequent reinfection of the pouch, but not infection of the nose. Thus, systemic immunity did not prevent the initiation of nasal influenza infection in the ferret. However, the duration of virus shedding from the nose was reduced to half of that seen when ferrets were infected for the first time, showing that the prior pouch infection did lead to a more rapid recovery from the subsequent nasal infection. Passively administered anti-influenza antibody did not prevent or modify the nasal infection, but it did prevent the pouch infection. This is consistent with the observation that an initial infection of the nose prevented pouch infection upon challenge 21 days later. The prior nasal infection also prevented the subsequent nasal infection. These data suggest that immunity to acquisition of influenza infection in the ferret is a local phenomenon, whereas recovery from active infection is influenced by systemic immune mechanisms.
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PMID:Local and systemic immunity to influenza infections in ferrets. 71 16


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