Publications by authors named "Alan Curry"

Electron microscopy (EM), real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and conventional PCR were used to identify viruses associated with infection in 2 transplantation patients. An autologous haematopoietic stem cell, liver and renal transplant recipient was found to be positive for simian virus 40 (SV40). Dual BK virus and SV40 infection was found in a heart and renal transplantation patient.

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Diagnosis of microsporidial infections is routinely performed by light microscopy, with unequivocal non-molecular species identification achievable only through electron microscopy. This study describes a single SYBR Green real-time PCR assay for the simultaneous detection and species identification of such infections. This assay was highly sensitive, routinely detecting infections containing 400 parasites (g stool sample)(-1), whilst species identification was achieved by differential melt curves on a Corbett Life Science Rotor-Gene 3000.

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The free spindled cells of the lamina propria of the gut have been reported as showing fibroblastic, smooth-muscle and myofibroblastic differentiation. A precise understanding of the differentiation of these cells is essential for appreciating their functions, and this paper addresses this question using ultrastructural analysis. Histologically normal samples from different areas of the gastrointestinal tract were studied.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined the effectiveness of taurolidine-citrate versus heparin in preventing bacteremia in hemodialysis patients with intravascular catheters, revealing that taurolidine-citrate had fewer infections caused by Gram-negative organisms but did not significantly reduce overall bacteremia rates compared to heparin.
  • Despite the potential advantages of taurolidine-citrate, there was a higher incidence of thrombolytic therapy needed for patients using it.
  • Limitations included a small sample size and the fact that bacteremia was not specifically linked to catheter use, which could affect the results.
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The two-stage neuroinflammatory process, containment and progression, proposed to underlie neurodegeneration may predicate on systemic inflammation arising from the gastrointestinal tract. Helicobacter infection has been described as one switch in the pathogenic-circuitry of idiopathic parkinsonism (IP): eradication modifies disease progression and marked deterioration accompanies eradication-failure. Moreover, serum Helicobacter-antibody-profile predicts presence, severity and progression of IP.

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We challenge the concept of idiopathic parkinsonism (IP) as inevitably progressive neurodegeneration, proposing a natural history of sequential microbial insults with predisposing host response. Proof-of-principle that infection can contribute to IP was provided by case studies and a placebo-controlled efficacy study of Helicobacter eradication. "Malignant" IP appears converted to "benign", but marked deterioration accompanies failure.

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We undertook a detailed ultrastructural investigation to gain insight into the early stages of development of the vermiform myxozoan, Buddenbrockia plumnatellae Schröder, 1910 in two bryozoan hosts. Early cell complexes arise in the peritoneum after division and migration of isolated cells in the host body wall. The development of cell junctions linking the outer (mural) cells of the complex then produces a sac enclosing a mass of inner cells.

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Objectives: Heat shock protein 90 (hsp90) is targeted by the humoral response in invasive candidiasis. This paper tests for synergy between caspofungin and efungumab--a human antibody fragment against hsp90.

Methods: The MIC-0, MIC-2 values and FICI were determined for a range of yeasts against efungumab and caspofungin.

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An HIV-negative patient from Bangladesh with bilateral keratitis was found to be infected with a microsporidian parasite belonging to the genus Nosema. Significantly, the patient had bathed in a rural pond 7 days prior to the development of ocular symptoms. Nosema parasites are common insect parasites and the source of this microsporidial infection was possibly from mosquito larvae developing in the pond in which the patient bathed.

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Purpose: To relate the clinical signs, histopathologic features, and in vivo confocal biomicroscopy findings of a case of stromal microsporidial keratitis and to describe the use of in vivo confocal microscopy to monitor treatment effect.

Methods: An immunocompetent male patient presented with unilateral indolent stromal keratitis. Stromal microsporidiosis was confirmed after corneal biopsy.

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Development of a new species of malacosporean myxozoan (Buddenbrockia allmani n. sp.) in the bryozoan Lophopus crystallinus is described.

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During reinforced surveillance of acute bacterial meningitis in Burkina Faso, meningococcal strains of phenotype NG:NT:NST were isolated from cerebrospinal fluid samples from 3 patients. The strains were negative for the ctrA gene but were positive for the crgA gene. Molecular typing revealed that the strains harbored the capsule null locus (cnl) and belonged to the multilocus sequence type (ST)-192.

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Transmission electron microscopy has had a profound impact on our knowledge and understanding of viruses and bacteria. The 1000-fold improvement in resolution provided by electron microscopy (EM) has allowed visualization of viruses, the existence of which had previously only been suspected as the causative agents of transmissible infectious disease. Viruses are grouped into families based on their morphology.

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Xenomas caused by Microgemma vivaresi Canning, Feist, Longshaw, Okamura, Anderson, Tsuey Tse et Curry, 2005 were found in liver and skeletal muscle of sea scorpions, Taurulus bubalis (Euphrasen). All muscle xenomas examined were in an advanced stage of destruction. In developing xenomas found in liver, parasites were restricted to the centre of the cell, separated from a parasite-free zone by a nuclear network formed by branching of the host cell nucleus.

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Reinvestigation of Cystosporogenes operophterae [J. Parasitol. 46 (1960) 755] by electron microscopy confirmed that development in host cells takes place in a vacuole with a single membrane at its boundary.

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Two cases with chronic stromal keratitis are described in immunocompetent hosts where the diagnosis was originally thought to be herpetic or adenoviral disease. Light microscopy and ultrastructural examination of corneal tissue by electron microscopy were performed following penetrating keratoplasty (case 1) and corneal biopsy (case 2). Specimens from both cases were analysed for viral identification by PCR.

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This article describes the methods used to investigate 407 outbreaks of acute non-bacterial gastroenteritis occurring in the North-West of England between January 2000 and July 2001 and suspected to be caused by noroviruses (NV) [Mayo (2002) Arch Virol 147:1655-1663]. These included 319 outbreaks in hospitals and nursing homes and 88 other settings. Eight hundred and seventy-one faecal samples from 407 outbreaks were tested using electron microscopy (EM), an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) specific for Grimsby virus (GRV) capsid antigen and/or by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for NV, allowing the utility of each assay for routine diagnosis to be assessed.

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Objectives: To review and assess the role of electron microscopy in the investigation of new infectious diseases.

Design: To design a screening strategy to maximize the likelihood of detecting new or emerging pathogens in clinical samples.

Results: Electron microscopy remains a useful method of investigating some viral infections (infantile gastroenteritis, virus-induced outbreaks of gastroenteritis and skin lesions) using the negative staining technique.

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Buddenbrockia plumatellae, an enigmatic worm-like myxozoan, was observed as continuously writhing free and attached 'worms' and as free mature spores in the coelom of the freshwater bryozoans Plumatella fungosa, Hyalinella punctata, and Fredericella sp. 'Worm' numbers could double every three days. 'Worms' and spores could be expelled from colonies by external pressure.

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