Publications by authors named "Ferric C Fang"

The laboratory diagnosis of infection (CDI) is controversial. Nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT) and toxin enzyme immunoassays (EIA) are most widely used, often in combination. However, the interpretation of a positive NAAT and negative toxin immunoassay (NAAT+/EIA-) is uncertain.

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After centuries of relative stability, the scientific publishing world has undergone tremendous disruption and change during the first decades of the 21st century. The causes for disruption can be traced to the information revolution, which brought such benefits as rapid publication, greater connectivity, and ready access to large databases, along with less desirable practices including image manipulation, plagiarism, and other ethical transgressions. The information revolution has driven the proliferation of journals, expansion of for-profit academic publishing, and empowerment of the open-access movement, each of which has exerted new financial pressures on traditional publishing models.

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Unlabelled: is a ubiquitous environmental pathogen. Despite its remarkable adaptability, little is known about the mechanisms of stress resistance in this bacterium. Here, in a screen for iron-susceptible transposon mutants, we identified a cytochrome that protects against multiple stresses.

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Background: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global threat to infectious disease control, particularly among recently hospitalized children. We sought to determine the prevalence and mitigating factors of resistance in enteric among children discharged from health facilities in western Kenya.

Methods: Between June 2016 and November 2019, children aged 1 to 59 months were enrolled at the point of discharge from the hospital.

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Despite modern antiseptic techniques, surgical site infection (SSI) remains a leading complication of surgery. However, the origins of SSI and the high rates of antimicrobial resistance observed in these infections are poorly understood. Using instrumented spine surgery as a model of clean (class I) skin incision, we prospectively sampled preoperative microbiomes and postoperative SSI isolates in a cohort of 204 patients.

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Science currently faces major external and internal threats. External threats include persistent anti-science attacks, the post-pandemic politicization of public health, and chronic underfunding. Internal threats include a proliferation of low-quality studies, an epidemic of retractions, and questions regarding the reproducibility of important research findings.

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Unlabelled: serovars Typhi and Paratyphi cause a prolonged illness known as enteric fever, whereas other serovars cause acute gastroenteritis. Mechanisms responsible for the divergent clinical manifestations of nontyphoidal and enteric fever infections have remained elusive. Here, we show that .

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Background: Nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae, often associated with wounds, can rarely cause infective endocarditis (IE). Five patients with C. diphtheriae IE were identified within 12 months at a Seattle-based hospital system.

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The phrase "gain of function" (GOF) has recently acquired a negative connotation in experimental biology by its association with risky science. Whereas much of the discussion on the relative merits of GOF-type experiments has focused on their risk-benefit equation, relatively little has been said about their epistemic value. In this article, we recount how GOF experiments were critical for establishing DNA as the genetic material, the identification of cellular receptors, and the role of oncogenes in cancer research.

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A total of 199 Gram-negative bacterial isolates from urinary tract infections and 162 from bloodstream infections were collected from 12 healthcare systems throughout the United States between May 2021 and August 2022. The isolates, phenotypically non-susceptible to 2nd or 3rd generation cephalosporins or carbapenems, were characterized through antimicrobial susceptibility testing and whole genome sequence analysis to obtain a broad snapshot of beta-lactamase-mediated resistance among these two sample types. Overall, 23 different carbapenemase genes were detected among 13 species (20.

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Background: Shigella spp have been associated with community-wide outbreaks in urban settings. We analysed a sustained shigellosis outbreak in Seattle, WA, USA, to understand its origins and mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance, define ongoing transmission patterns, and optimise strategies for treatment and infection control.

Methods: We did a retrospective study of all Shigella isolates identified from stool samples at the clinical laboratories at Harborview Medical Center and University of Washington Medical Center (Seattle, WA, USA) from May 1, 2017, to Feb 28, 2022.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study focused on acute infectious gastroenteritis (AGE) in adult outpatients in the U.S., analyzing demographics, clinical characteristics, pathogens, healthcare resource use, and costs from 2016 to 2021.
  • - Out of 248,896 patients, the average age was 44.3 years, with a majority being female (62.9%) and White (68.5%); most patients didn’t have preexisting conditions and were mainly treated in emergency departments.
  • - The average cost for a patient’s visit and follow-up care for AGE was approximately $1,338, with Clostridioides difficile being the most detected pathogen in patients who underwent microbiology testing.
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Article Synopsis
  • A study examined the effectiveness of different diagnostic methods for acute infectious gastroenteritis (AGE) in adult outpatients at U.S. hospitals, comparing traditional work-ups (TW) to two types of multiplex PCR panels.
  • The research found that the PCR panel with 12 or more target pathogens (PCR12) yielded higher pathogen detection rates and resulted in lower follow-up hospitalization rates and costs, despite having a higher initial visit cost compared to TW.
  • Patients tested with PCR12 experienced quicker results, fewer stool tests, and a reduced likelihood of receiving unnecessary in-hospital antibiotics compared to those tested via TW.
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Background: In spring of 2022, an outbreak of monkeypox (mpox) spread worldwide. Here, we describe performance characteristics of monkeypox virus (MPXV)-specific and pan-orthopoxvirus qPCR assays for clinical use.

Methods: We validated probe-based qPCR assays targeting MPXV-specific loci F3L and G2R (genes MPXVgp052/OPG065 and MPXVgp002 and gp190/OPG002, respectively) and a pan-orthopoxvirus assay targeting the E9L locus (MPXVgp057/OPG071).

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The sequestration of iron in case of infection, termed nutritional immunity, is an established strategy of host defense. However, the interaction between pathogens and the mammalian iron storage protein ferritin is hitherto not completely understood. To better characterize the function of ferritin in Gram-negative infections, we incubated iron-starved cultures of Typhimurium and knockout mutant strains defective for major iron uptake pathways or with horse spleen ferritin or ionic iron as the sole iron source.

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Efforts to understand molecular mechanisms of pathogenesis of the human-restricted pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, the causative agent of typhoid fever, have been hampered by the lack of a tractable small animal model. This obstacle has been surmounted by a humanized mouse model in which genetically modified mice are engrafted with purified CD34+ stem cells from human umbilical cord blood, designated CD34+ Hu-NSG (formerly hu-SRC-SCID) mice. We have shown that these mice develop a lethal systemic infection with S.

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Pressures to publish, perverse incentives, financial interest and gender are amongst the most commonly discussed risk factors for scientific misconduct. However, evidence of their association with actual data fabrication and falsification is inconclusive. A recent case-controlled analysis of articles containing problematic image duplications suggested that country of affiliation of first and last authors is a significant predictor of scientific misconduct.

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A variety of eubacteria, plants, and protozoa can modify membrane lipids by cyclopropanation, which is reported to modulate membrane permeability and fluidity. The ability to cyclopropanate membrane lipids has been associated with resistance to oxidative stress in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, organic solvent stress in Escherichia coli, and acid stress in E. coli and Salmonella.

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Background: An elevated white blood cell count (WBC; >15 000/μL) is an established prognostic marker in patients with Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). Small observational studies have suggested that a markedly elevated WBC should prompt consideration of CDI. However, there is limited evidence correlating WBC elevation with the results of C.

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serovar Typhimurium is an intracellular pathogen that elicits nitric oxide (NO·) production by host macrophages. NO· is a potent antimicrobial mediator with diverse targets, including protein thiols and metal centers. The mobilization of zinc from metalloproteins by NO· increases the availability of free intracellular zinc, which is detrimental to bacterial cells, but the precise mechanism of zinc cytotoxicity is uncertain.

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In this article, the editors of Clinical Infectious Diseases review some of the most important lessons they have learned about the epidemiology, clinical features, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of SARS-CoV-2 infection and identify essential questions about COVID-19 that remain to be answered.

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Nitric oxide (NO˙) is a radical molecule produced by mammalian phagocytic cells as part of the innate immune response to bacterial pathogens. It exerts its antimicrobial activity in part by impairing the function of metalloproteins, particularly those containing iron and zinc cofactors. The pathogenic Gram-negative bacterium Salmonella enterica serovar typhimurium undergoes dynamic changes in its cellular content of the four most common metal cofactors following exposure to NO˙ stress.

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