Publications by authors named "Albritton W"

Background. Ear infections in children are a major health problem and may be associated with hearing impairment and delayed language development. Objective.

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Objective: To determine the demographic, clinical and microbiological characteristics of a representative Canadian obstetrical population.

Design: A one-year cohort study of all maternity patients who were followed to delivery, using detailed patient questionnaires containing more than 60 demographic and clinical variables, and three microbiological evaluations during gestation - first trimester, 26 to 30 weeks, and labour and delivery. Outcome measurements included birth weight and gestational age.

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During the initial Partners Meeting of the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada (AFMC), the Canadian Association for Medical Education (CAME), the College of Family Physicians of Canada (CFPC), the Medical Council of Canada (MCC), and the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC) in May 2005, a plenary discussion and debate focused on the tensions that exist between generalist and subspecialty education within both the undergraduate and postgraduate educational programs in Canadian medical schools. Key issues identified in the debate included medical student selection, generalist representation on medical school faculty and in learning experiences, and the need for a greater teaching role and respect for generalism to be developed.

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Evidence for gene silencing of Haemophilus influenzae involved a beta-subunit of RNA polymerase. The gene presumed silenced was rifampin resistance. The evidence that it was silencing, rather than dominance of a rifampin-sensitive marker, was that it took place when the rifampin resistance marker was on both a plasmid and the chromosome, without the presence of a rifampin-sensitive marker, as judged by lack of transformation of a rifampin-resistant cell to rifampin sensitivity by the plasmid.

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Microbiological impedance devices are routinely used by food and manufacturing industries, and public health agencies to measure microbiological growth. Factors contributing to increases and decreases in capacitance at the culture medium-electrode interface are poorly understood. To objectively evaluate the effects of temperature, cell density and medium conductivity on capacitance, admittance values from an impedance device were standardized; capacitance was converted to susceptance to allow unit comparisons with conductance.

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Laboratory testing for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) has been introduced for individual patient-based diagnosis as well as high-risk and low-risk population-based screening. The choice of test, confirmatory algorithm, and interpretative criteria used depend on the clinical setting. In the context of general population-based testing, factors affecting test performance will have to be considered carefully in the development of testing policy.

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We present an analysis of the complete nucleotide sequence of pLS88, a naturally occurring, 4.8-kb broad-host-range plasmid isolated from Haemophilus ducreyi and encoding resistance to sulfonamides, streptomycin, and kanamycin. Sequence analysis of the genes encoding sulfonamide and streptomycin resistance revealed homology to the RSF1010 sulII and strA genes.

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Limited sequencing of the terminal region of the hisC gene in two deletion mutants involving the hisC gene of Salmonella typhimurium was carried out after polymerase chain reaction amplification of the appropriate region, using oligonucleotide primers selected from the published sequence of the histidine operon from this organism. his2648 was shown to have a 34 base pair deletion in the terminal region of the hisC gene between the P2 promoter and the Shine-Delgarno sequence of the hisB gene. hisHB22 was shown to have a 1.

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The nonconjugative ampicillin-resistance plasmid RSF0885 has been reported to be as small as 2.9 MDa and as large as 4.1 MDa with at least two restriction enzyme maps reported.

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A major outbreak of 5,683 cases of pertussis occurred in northern Alberta, Canada, from December 1989 to January 1991. The outbreak highlighted a number of problems with current methods of pertussis diagnosis. In particular, an exceptionally high proportion of direct fluorescent-antibody (DFA)-positive, culture-negative specimens (88.

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The published nucleotide sequences of the 16S rRNA gene of Haemophilus ducreyi were used to develop primer sets and probes for the diagnosis of chancroid by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) DNA amplification. One set of broad specificity primers yielded a 303-bp PCR product from all bacteria tested. Two 16-base probes internal to this sequence were species specific for H.

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Laboratory support for the diagnosis and treatment of sexually transmitted diseases has traditionally been within a patient-based diagnostic paradigm. Tests and interpretative criteria developed within this paradigm may not be appropriate for laboratories supporting population-based STD control programs. As STD control strategies expand to population-based levels, the present patient-based laboratory models will have to be modified to meet these increased demands.

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Little is known about the genetics of Haemophilus ducreyi, the etiologic agent of chancroid. To develop a method for constructing isogenic mutants of this organism that could be utilized in pathogenesis-related studies, electroporation techniques were evaluated as a means of introducing DNA into this organism. Electroporation of the plasmid shuttle vector pLS88 into H.

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There has not previously been an objective comparison of medium formulations for the primary isolation of Haemophilus species. This study was undertaken to evaluate the components required for the optimal growth of large, easily identifiable colonies of these bacteria. We compared six medium bases and seven supplements for their ability to support the growth of 86 strains of Haemophilus influenzae and 17 strains of other species of Haemophilus.

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A collection of 100 clinical isolates of Haemophilus ducreyi from Thailand were all found to harbor a 5.4-kb plasmid, designated pTH126, which was shown to contain the bla ROB-1 gene. Restriction enzyme analysis and DNA-DNA hybridization studies confirmed that pTH126 was similar to the ROB-1 beta-lactamase plasmid pVM105 from Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae.

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Membrane filtration, spread plating, and pour plating are conventional methods used to determine the heterotrophic plate counts of water samples. Impedance methods were investigated as an alternative to conventional methods, since sample dilution is not required and the bacterial count can be estimated within 24 h. Comparisons of impedance signals obtained with different water samples revealed that capacitance produced faster detection times than conductance.

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Epiglottitis is an acute, life threatening infection usually caused by Haemophilus influenzae type b. Although antibiotic therapy is an important part of management, the optimal route and duration is unknown. A multicentre retrospective review of 305 children with epiglottitis was carried out in order to relate antibiotic therapy to hospital course and outcome, as well as to examine regional variation in patient demographics, clinical presentation and course of disease.

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An unusual food-borne outbreak of gastroenteritis associated with contaminated turkey occurred at a catered company meal. The average incubation period was 10 h, and the predominant symptoms were watery diarrhea and cramps. Vomiting did not occur.

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The etiological agent of the sexually transmitted genital ulcer disease chancroid was first described in 1889 by Auguste Ducrey following repeated autoinoculation of purulent ulcer material from a series of patients. The organism was isolated on artificial media a decade later but has remained difficult to isolate consistently, resulting in controversy over its characteristics and role as the causative agent of chancroid. Because of its fastidious growth requirements, including unknown components in blood, the organism was included in the original description of the genus Haemophilus.

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Plasmid pLS88 from a clinical isolate of Haemophilus ducreyi encoded resistance determinants for sulfonamides and streptomycin related to those of RSF1010 and for kanamycin related to Tn903 but lacked the inverted repeats of the transposon. Its host range included Haemophilus influenzae, Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, and Escherichia coli; and it was compatible with pDM2 and RSF1010.

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An Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae strain contained a plasmid (pHD8.1) conferring resistance to streptomycin and sulfonamide. Restriction endonuclease mapping and DNA-DNA hybridization showed that pHD8.

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A microcomputer mainframe linked system is described which allows video camera data capture and storage of one-dimensional whole-cell protein electrophoresis gel images, processing of normalized traces to produce a similarity matrix, and analysis of the matrix using the commercial cluster analysis program CLUSTAN. A new similarity coefficient is introduced which takes into account both band position and intensity. Forty-five strains of Haemophilus influenzae, including the eight biotypes and six serotypes, were analyzed using this system.

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