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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The investigation demonstrates the usefulness of a radiometric
urease
test in the rapid detection of
Haemophilus
influenzae in cerebrospinal fluid specimens. The test is simple and economical to perform and results are obtained within a one hour incubation period.
...
PMID:Radiometric detection of Haemophilus influenzae in cerebrospinal fluid specimens. 30 14
The biochemical characteristics of 464 strains of
Haemophilus
influenzae and 83 strains of
Haemophilus
parainfluenzae isolated over an 18-month period are described. Of 22 characteristics obtained, only 6 were necessary to biochemically identify and biotype the isolates. The key substrates or tests were
urease
, ornithine, indole, o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside, sucrose, and xylose. Five biotypes of H. influenzae and four of H. parainfluenzae were commonly recognized. Some strains were encountered which could not be accommodated in the recognized taxa but which constituted separate biotypes of the two species, H. influenzae biotype I was recovered principally from blood, cerebrospinal fluid, and upper respiratory secretion, and biotypes II and III were recovered from eye and sputum cultures. Biotype I was recovered primarily from children less than 1 year of age, whereas biotypes II and III were from persons 1 to 5 years old and from those over 20 years of age. Multiple isolates recovered from the same patient were almost always of the same biotype. Strains of H. parainfluenzae were isolated primarily from sputum, with others being isolated from body sources such as dental abscesses, gastric aspirates, and peritoneal fluid. An inverse relationship was noticed between hemolysis and mannose fermentation among H. parainfluenzae biotype III strains, whereas the relationship was absent among the other biotypes.
...
PMID:Biotypes of Haemophilus encountered in clinical laboratories. 31 64
The isolation, characterization, and identification of a microorganism isolated from gastrointestinal tracts of rabbits with mucoid enteritis are described. The isolated organism did not grow on standard media. This organism grew around colonies of Staphylococcus aureus and Lactobacillus desidiosus and around disks saturated with diphosphopyridin nucleotide (factor V) on brain heart infusion agar. The growth of this organism was also observed on media supplemented with beta-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide. The organism appeared as gram-negative, pleomorphic rods or coccobacilli. It was positive for
urease
, oxidase, catalase, glycosidases, porphyrin, and indole, and it fermented glucose and sucrose. All of these characteristics suggest that the organism is a member of the genus
Haemophilus
. Because of its isolation from rabbits and differences in some characteristics from other species of this genus, the name
Haemophilus
paracuniculus is proposed for this organism.
...
PMID:Characterization of a Haemophilus paracuniculus isolated from gastrointestinal tracts of rabbits with mucoid enteritis. 42 39
Sixty-eight
Haemophilus
somnus strains isolated from the bovine in Canada and the U.S.A. were compared. In media enriched with 5% ovine serum, 5% bovine serum and 10% yeast extract, H. somnus fermented glucose, levulose, maltose, mannitol, mannose, sorbitol, trehalose and xylose, but failed to ferment arabinose, dulcitol, galactose, inositol, lactose, raffinose, rhamnose, salicin and sucrose. The organisms acidified litmus milk, produced cytochrome oxidase, indole and hydrogen sulfide (H(2)S) and reduced nitrates to nitrites. The motility, methyl-red, acetylmethyl-carbinol
urease
catalase, citrate, malonate, lysine, ornithine and arginine tests were negative.
Haemophilus
somnus was resistant to lincomycin, neomycin and triple sulfa, but susceptible to ampicillin, chloramphenicol, streptomycin, penicillin and tetracycline. No antigenic differences were noted between strains when tested against rabbit antisera of eight strains using agglutination, complement-fixation, immunodiffusion and counterimmunoelectrophoresis tests. Low titre cross-reactions were found in the agglutination tests with some of the anti-H. somnus rabbit sera with Actinobacillus lignieresi and Moraxella bovis. No distinct antigenic similarities to nine other species of pathogenic bacteria of animal origin were found. No difference was observed between H. somnus isolates from Ontario and those from western Canada and the U.S.A.
...
PMID:A comparison of various Haemophilus somnus strains. 92 55
A total of 2401 isolates of
Haemophilus
parainfluenzae was isolated from respiratory secretions of 36 healthy adults and 128 patients with chronic bronchitis over a period of 1 year. The isolates were allocated to eight biotypes, by their production of indole,
urease
and ornithine decarboxylase. Biotypes I and II constituted most of the isolates of H. parainfluenzae from the oropharynx of controls (75%) and chronic bronchitics (c. 90%). Among the patients, there was no difference in the isolation rate between oropharyngeal swabs and sputum specimens. Biotypes III, IV, VI, VII and VIII were isolated less frequently, as was a new taxon defined here as biotype V which does not produce indole,
urease
or ornithine decarboxylase. Biotype III was isolated significantly less frequently from cases of chronic bronchitis than from controls, whereas biotype II was isolated somewhat more frequently from the patients, especially during acute episodes.
...
PMID:Biotypes of Haemophilus parainfluenzae from the respiratory secretions in chronic bronchitis. 156 Apr 50
The Minitek system and the more recently introduced Micro Scan HNID panels for the identification and biotyping of 98 V dependent
Haemophilus
isolates were compared. Identical results were obtained for 77 isolates. The discrepancy in the results of ornithine and
urease
was accounted for mainly by the mismatching of the identification by the two kits. When 13 isolates of H parainfluenzae with mismatched biotypes were re-examined, the results from Micro Scan correlated with 92% of those obtained by Christensen's urea broth and 100% by the ornithine test (Lab M); the corresponding figures for Minitek were 61% and 30%, respectively. Micro Scan was easy to handle on the bench and results were ready on the same day. These results suggest that further work is required to assess these two systems for the biotyping of H parainfluenzae.
...
PMID:Comparison of two commercial kits for identifying and biotyping Haemophilus parainfluenzae. 199 42
The biochemical characteristics of 114 respiratory
Haemophilus
isolates were examined by the Minitek and Microbact systems. The Microbact system was easy to use and read, although some of the less important reactions (glucose and xylose) were difficult to interpret on occasions. On the basis of the 3 crucial reactions--indole production, ornithine decarboxylase and
urease
activity--discrepancies between the two systems were minor. Given careful standardization of techniques the Microbact system is a suitable alternative to established techniques for the biotyping of H. influenzae and H. parainfluenzae.
...
PMID:Biotyping respiratory Haemophilus species with the microbact system. 306 Aug 21
The biochemical properties of 39 strains of
Haemophilus
avium from chickens were determined. All the strains produced acid from fructose, galactose, glucose and mannose but not from lactose. Variable reactions were found for arabinose, maltose, mannitol, sorbitol, trehalose and xylose. No strains showed
urease
activity or produced indole, while beta-galactosidase and/or ornithine decarboxylase activity was present in some strains. This variability allowed the recognition of 15 biochemical biovars including some not previously recognized in H. avium. Only 25 (64%) of the H. avium strains could be assigned to the three species (Pasteurella avium, P. volantium and Pasteurella species A) recently proposed to replace H. avium.
...
PMID:Biochemical properties of catalase-positive avian haemophili. 315 Dec 6
A total of 180 strains of
Haemophilus
influenzae and 119 strains of
Haemophilus
parainfluenzae were characterized with respect to biotype (i.e., production of indole,
urease
, and ornithine decarboxylase) using conventional biochemical methods and two commercially available biotyping systems: Trio-Tube
Haemophilus
system (Carr Microbiologicals) and the Rapid NH System (Inovative Diagnostic Systems). Concordance between the results of the Trio-Tube system and conventional biochemicals was achieved with 294 of the 299 test organisms (98.3%). With the Rapid NH System, concordance with the results of conventional biochemical tests was observed with 275 of the 299 tests strains (92.0%). One previously unrecognized biotype of H. parainfluenzae, designated biotype VIII, is described. Typical reactions of this biotype include indole production but no production of
urease
or ornithine decarboxylase.
...
PMID:Determination of biotypes of Haemophilus influenzae and Haemophilus parainfluenzae a comparison of methods and a description of a new biotype (VIII) of H. parainfluenzae. 350 12
Eighteen field isolates of
Haemophilus
pleuropneumoniae were studied biochemically and serotyped using the complement fixation test (CFT), agglutination test and the immunodiffusion test. Three biochemical tests (V-dependency, CAMP-reaction and
urease
activity) were found to be very useful for the biochemical characterization of the H. pleuropneumoniae. Haemolysis on blood agar plates, although present, was not sufficiently pronounced in all cases to warrant absolute dependence on this characteristic. Serological typing revealed the isolates belong to Serotypes 1 and 5. The immunodiffusion test proved to be the most serotype specific, while a marked cross-reaction was observed with the CFT.
...
PMID:Biochemical and serological identification of strains of Haemophilus pleuropneumoniae. 392 57
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