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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (Haemophilus)
15,372 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cellular, colonial, cultural, and biochemical characteristics of 25 field strains of gram-negative pleomorphic bacilli from rams with epididymitis were compared with Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) strain 29522 and Actinobacillus seminis ATCC strain 15768. Three field strains were identified as A. actinomycetemcomitans, 15 as A. seminis, and 2 as Haemophilus agni; however, 5 strains (3 in group A and 2 in group B) were not identified as species in the genera Actinobacillus, Haemophilus, or Pasteurella based on the taxonomic criteria in Bergey's manual of systematic bacteriology. The 5 Actinobacillus-like organisms in groups A and B were predominantly gram-negative coccobacilli and exhibited less pleomorphism than the 2 Actinobacillus species. The colonial morphologies of groups A and B were similar to the 2 Actinobacillus species but were smaller in diameter and had a pale yellow color. Groups A and B, like the actinobacilli, were facultative anaerobic and capnophilic, did not grow on MacConkey agar, and were catalase-positive and oxidase-positive. Group A reduced nitrate but group B did not. The A. seminis strains utilized ornithine, and group A utilized arginine; but group B did not utilize either ornithine or arginine. All strains failed to utilize lysine or tryptophane. All strains produced acid but no gas from glucose, and the utilization of other carbohydrates varied markedly both between and within the 5 groups of bacteria.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cultural and biochemical characterization of Actinobacillus and Actinobacillus-like species from ram lambs with epididymitis. 248 12

The banding profiles generated by Bam H1 restriction endonuclease cleavage of bacterial DNA from clinical and reference isolates of Histophilus ovis, Haemophilus somnus and related bacteria were compared. H. ovis, H. somnus and Haemophilus agni isolates were found to have distinct similarities in banding profiles characterised by 10 common bands between 2.0 and 9.6 kilobases (kb). The close taxonomic relationship of these isolates was reinforced by these findings. The reference isolates examined in this study--Actinobacillus lignieresii, Actinobacillus seminis, H. agni, H. somnus, H. ovis, Haemophilus influenzae, Haemophilus parainfluenzae, Haemophilus parahaemolyticus--could be distinguished from each other on the basis of their characteristic banding profiles. Actinobacillus sp were observed to have more bands between 2 and 23 kb compared with the H. ovis and Haemophilus sp isolates studied. Analysis of isolates from an experimental infection trial illustrated the potential of restriction endonuclease analysis in molecular epidemiological applications. It was possible to demonstrate by this means that the post-challenge isolates had identical banding profiles to the challenge (or infecting) isolate which had a distinctly different banding profile from that of pre-challenge H. ovis isolates. Furthermore, restriction endonuclease analysis of H. ovis isolates obtained from follow-up investigations of a recurrent problem of epididymitis in unmated rams, indicated that the H. ovis isolates implicated in epididymitis, were present as a single strain in a number of sheep over a period of time. This suggested that the mechanism of transmission was by perinatal perputial contamination.
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PMID:Characterisation of Histophilus ovis and related organisms by restriction endonuclease analysis. 302 98

The acute scrotum in infants and children is generally due to torsion of the spermatic cord, torsion of the appendix testis, or acute epididymitis. An infant is presented who was found to have epididymitis and a scrotal abscess due to Haemophilus influenzae type b at the time of surgical exploration for suspected torsion of the spermatic cord.
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PMID:Acute scrotum due to Haemophilus influenzae type b. 327 88

Physicians treated a 37 year old man, who 5 years earlier had a successful vasectomy reversal, with a 24 hour history of intense left testicular pain, rigors, and pain and difficulty in urinating. Prior to these symptoms, he noted a mild, transient urethral discharge. Upon examination, physicians noted a fever of 38.5 degrees Celsius and swelling and tenderness around the left testis extending towards the groin. Pus cells existed in the urine, but no organism was found. While operating on the scrotal sac, physicians observed severe epididymitis which extended to the vasovasostomy site where a firm granuloma existed. The testis itself seemed fine. Blood cultures taken on admission revealed Haemophilus influenzae (non capsulate, biotype II) and ampicillin was administered intravenously. This case's physicians have not heard of any previous reported severe infection of a vasovasostomy site with bacteremia. Generally, granuloma formation after a vasovasostomy is caused by sperm leakage and represents an inflammatory response often resulting in obstruction. This may predispose the site to infection. Haemophilus influenzae rarely causes epididymo-vasitis but perhaps non capsulated strains possess an increased ability to evade host defenses, especially in a vasovasostomy granuloma, a damaged tissue.
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PMID:Epididymo-vasitis associated with previous reversal of sterilisation. 340 94

Identified and partly identified bacterial isolates were obtained from 48 rams of various breeds that had unilateral or bilateral epididymitis. Most of the animals were approximately 1 year of age; a few were older. Brucella ovis, Actinobacillus spp, Corynebacterium spp, Haemophilus spp, Acinetobacter spp, Escherichia coli, Moraxella spp, Staphylococcus spp, Pasteurella spp, Streptococcus spp, and Chlamydia psittaci were isolated. A vaccine strain of B ovis, isolated species of bacteria, and mixtures of isolates of tissue homogenates containing all isolates except B ovis and C psittaci were inoculated via the mucous membranes of the eyes, nares, and prepuce. Palpable epididymitis was not produced by the inoculations. The vaccine strain of B ovis induced complement-fixation reaction in 11 of 20 rams.
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PMID:Etiologic significance of bacterial isolates from rams with palpable epididymitis. 352 7

As a test of susceptibility of laboratory animals to the causative organism of thrombotic meningoencephalitis of cattle, young mice, rats, rabbits, piglets, chicks and hamsters were exposed to the virulent strain 43826 of Haemophilus somnus by the intravenous and intraperitoneal routes. Only the hamsters developed lesions attributable to the organism. Two of ten hamsters developed an acute orchitis and epididymitis characterized by necrosis and arteritis. The fact that Histophilus ovis, a cause of epididymitis in Australian and New Zealand rams, is apparently very closely related to Haemophilus somnus suggests that the hamster may be a useful laboratory model to study this disease.
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PMID:The pathogenicity of Haemophilus somnus in various laboratory animal species. 671 52

Testicles from rams in flocks experiencing ram epididymitis in Idaho and eastern Oregon were cultured. Twenty-six breeding rams from 6 flocks were cultured and only Brucella ovis was isolated. Virgin rams (65) harbored numerous species of small fastidious gram-negative rods, including Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, Haemophilus spp, Moraxella spp, and Pasteurella spp. Thus, there appeared to be 2 separate disease entities, dependent on sexual experience of the animal.
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PMID:Association of sexual experience with isolation of various bacteria in cases of ovine epididymitis. 683 70

We recently saw two unusual manifestations of Haemophilus influenzae infection in adults in the Seattle area: fulminant sepsis in an otherwise-healthy man and three episodes of bacteremia in a woman with chronic liver disease. We retrospectively identified 79 bacteremic and 40 non-bacteremic cases of invasive H. influenzae infection developing in patients > or = 9 years of age between 1 January 1980 and 31 December 1990. The most common clinical presentations among patients with bacteremia included pneumonia (52%), septicemia (27%), meningitis (8%), gynecologic infection (5%), and epiglottitis (5%). Underlying illnesses were common in these patients, and overall mortality was 35.5%. Factors associated with mortality included underlying neurological disease, polymicrobial bacteremia, and advanced age. The clinical presentations of the 40 patients without bacteremia included soft-tissue abscesses (45%), lung abscesses (18%), peritonitis (13%), meningitis (8%), gynecologic infection (8%), epididymitis (5%), mastoiditis (3%), and osteomyelitis (3%). Thus H. influenzae disease has a variety of presentations and is associated with significant mortality in older children and adults. Further study is required to determine whether widespread administration of H. influenzae type b conjugate vaccine to infants will alter the development of subsequent disease in later life.
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PMID:Invasive Haemophilus influenzae infections in older children and adults in Seattle. 821 79

Bacterial infections of the male genital tract in young men (<35 years old) are primarily caused by sexually transmissible bacteria like Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae but also Mycoplasma or Haemophilus spp. In men aged over 35 years, Enterobacteriaceae are more frequently involved in urethritis, epididymitis and prostatitis. The traditional treatments suggested like tetracyclines or erythromycin are less effective since bacterial resistance is increasingly frequent, particularly in N. gonorrhoeae. Moreover, patient compliance with these drug treatments are frequently not well observed. New therapies including short term therapy with fluoroquinolones or azalides (e.g. azithromycin) are very effective and easy to use and thus eliminate any problem of compliance. However, we have to be vigilant for the emergence of resistant strains to these agents.
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PMID:Practical recommendations for the drug treatment of bacterial infections of the male genital tract including urethritis, epididymitis and prostatitis. 1035 99

The occurrence and significance of Haemophilus spp. isolated from the genitourinary tract are not well known. Herein, we describe the clinical significance and characteristics of Haemophilus influenzae type b genogroup strains isolated from genitourinary tract specimens from an adult male veteran patient population and, in particular, their associations with prostatitis and epididymitis.
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PMID:Clinical significance and characterization of Haemophilus influenzae type b genogroup isolates from urine samples in an adult male population. 2459 84


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