Publications by authors named "Ganguli L"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated thrombosis occurrence in healthy soldiers at high altitudes, finding significantly higher rates of both venous and arterial thrombosis compared to near-sea-level environments.
  • Key physiological changes included increased coagulation factors and reduced levels of natural anticoagulants in those with thrombosis, alongside elevated inflammation and endothelial dysfunction markers.
  • These findings suggest that altitude may exacerbate thrombosis risk due to distinct biological mechanisms, highlighting the need for further research and awareness in high-altitude environments.
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The bacteriology of the tonsillar surface and core in 30 children undergoing tonsillectomy was studied. Antibiotics taken in the six months before surgery were recorded. Haemophilus influenzae and Staphylococcus aureus were the commonest isolates; Streptococcus pyogenes was relatively rare.

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Three hundred and forty-eight isolates of Candida spp. from patients treated at a regional infectious diseases unit for AIDS, immunocompromised patients admitted to the Hope Hospital and isolates referred from around the North West of England were tested for their in-vitro susceptibility to amphotericin B, fluconazole and flucytosine using standardized methods. Candida albicans comprised 73% of isolates, Candida glabrata 10% and Candida parapsilosis 7%.

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Shiga-like toxin-producing (SLT) Escherichia coli, particularly those belonging to serogroup O157, are responsible for haemorrhagic colitis, haemolytic uraemic syndrome and some cases of gastro-enteritis. The rapid and reliable diagnosis of all these infections is necessary for correct patient management and for epidemiological reasons, but is rarely possible with present methods. We compared the efficacy of two methods, (i) the culture of faeces in broth that contained mitomycin C followed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for SLTs, and (ii) the culture of faeces on sorbitol MacConkey agar (SMA), in the detection of infections caused by SLT-producing E.

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An outbreak of diarrhoea and vomiting began at a hospital for the elderly on the 25 October 1991. The symptoms and pattern of spread suggested a viral aetiology from a point source. Electron microscopy confirmed the presence of Norwalk virus.

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We present 2 cases of polymicrobial catheter sepsis in patients with long term central venous catheters who were receiving home parenteral nutrition. Both patients were generally unwell with haemodynamic instability. Attempts at catheter salvage by combined antibiotic and fibrinolytic administration through the central line were unsuccessful and resulted in patient deterioration.

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The detection of methicillin resistance by the breakpoint method was examined using three different media containing varying quantities of added salt and 4 mg/L methicillin or 1 mg/L oxacillin. Three hundred clinical isolates of eight species of coagulase-negative staphylococci were tested. In 68 strains methicillin resistance was expressed only at certain salt concentrations and four distinct susceptibility phenotypes were observed.

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Techniques currently available to detect Shiga-like toxin (SLT)-producing Escherichia coli lack sensitivity or require specialised equipment and facilities, and in some cases detect only strains belonging to serotype O157. We have used an ELISA technique, capable of detecting both SLTI and SLTII with crude P1 glycoprotein from hydatid cysts, in combination with enhancement of toxin production by culture with mitomycin C. Supernates of Tryptone Soya Broth cultures containing mitomycin C 200 ng/ml were tested for SLTII.

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Aims: To assess the accuracy of the Mast-ID 15 system compared with API 20 E for the identification of stock and fresh clinical strains of Enterobacteriaceae and Acinetobacter spp; to compare the accuracy of 19 pin and 36 pin multipoint inoculator heads.

Methods: One hundred frozen stock cultures of Enterobacteriaceae and Acinetobacter spp which had previously been identified by the API 20E were classified by the Mast-ID using 19 and 36 pin multipoint inoculator heads. Reproducibility was determined by testing 36 randomly selected organisms in duplicate.

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A numerical taxonomy was performed on 157 cultures (141 different strains) of species of Bacteroides, Polyphyromonas, Prevotella [not Prevotella (Labroue, 1976)] and Fusobacterium. Isolates were each tested for 111 phenotypic characters which included possession of constitutive enzymes, fermentation of specific carbohydrates, gas chromatographic analysis of metabolic end-products and of cellular carboxylic acid composition. Computation of similarity coefficients was followed by a single-linkage cluster analysis.

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This study evaluated the ability of a rapid identification system for anaerobic bacteria, ATB 32A, now renamed RAPID ID 32A (API-bioMérieux UK Ltd., Basingstoke), to identify accurately 74 strains of the 'B. fragilis group'.

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The detection of thermonuclease by the Oxford strain and eight clinical isolates of Staphylococcus aureus in a variety of bacteriological broths with and without added blood was examined using a toluidine blue-DNA-agar plate method. In Isosensitest, brain-heart infusion, tryptic soy, nutrient and gas-liquid chromatography broths (all of which do not contain liquoid) thermonuclease detection was uncomplicated. In Bactec broths (containing liquoid) detectable thermonuclease activity was greatly reduced in the absence of blood.

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Sixty-one cultures of Gram-negative anaerobic rods were isolated from deep periodontal pockets of patients with rapidly progressive periodontitis. Isolates were speciated as Bacteroides gingivalis (18 isolates), Bacteroides intermedius (8), Bacteroides oris (1), Bacteroides gracilis (17) and Fusobacterium nucleatum (17). Their susceptibilities, to seven antimicrobial agents, were determined in vitro using a plate dilution technique.

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Human blood reduced the numbers of colony-forming units (cfu) of Candida albicans in a blood-culture model so that the detection time was increased by 12 h. Reduction in cfu was accompanied not by reduction in cell mass but by observable clumping of cultures, which was attributable to a heat-stable serum component. The action of the latter component could be negated if the medium were supplemented by a combination of trypsin, 2-phenyl ethanol, liquoid and Tween 80, when a statistically significant improvement was noted in minimum detection time for C.

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Recovery of aerobes and facultative anaerobes from 200 consecutive randomly selected high vaginal swabs was evaluated using three-compartment Petri dishes containing Sabouraud, dextrose agar, GC selective agar, and chocolate agar. The method was compared with the traditional method using individual Petri dishes. The two methods produced comparable results both in terms and quantities of organisms recovered from the specimens.

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The present report is the first description to our knowledge of a clinical case of bacterial calcification in human infective endocarditic vegetations. Partial calcification of bacteria within vegetations may be a further mechanism of bacterial protection from host defences and antibiotics. Similar calcification has recently been reported in vegetations formed on porcine valvular prostheses implanted experimentally in sheep.

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This study compares the mean generation time (MGT) and lag period of the growth of Candida albicans in four blood culture media, under a variety of conditions of incubation. The media compared were Bactec 6B, brain-heart infusion, malt extract broth and Sabourauds liquid medium. All four media were incubated under the eight possible permutations of the following conditions: 37 degrees C or 30 degrees C, vented or unvented, unshaken or constantly shaken.

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A clinical and pharmacokinetic study was carried out to determine whether an intraperitoneal (IP) loading dose of vancomycin was as effective as an intravenous (IV) load in the treatment of continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD)-associated gram-positive peritonitis. Each patient continued a 14-day treatment on IP maintenance doses. All cases of peritonitis (10 in each group) were eradicated.

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The preferred dose of netilmicin was determined in each of 39 patients with severe gram-negative sepsis treated at two centres. The dose was based upon the attainment of recommended serum concentrations. Patient age varied from 18 to 87 years (mean 58), estimated creatinine clearance from 20 to 150 ml/min (mean 71), and the preferred dose from 100 to 750 mg/24 h.

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Results of blood culture examination using the radiometric (Bactec-460) system for one year showed no overall improvement compared with those of the previous three years when a manual system with early blind subculture was used. The isolates from the manual system were available more often on solid media, 24 hours earlier, than when the radiometric system was used. In a further study of 1100 blood cultures the radiometric medium was tested for growth index as well as being subcultured blindly, irrespective of growth index, on the first day.

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A prospective study on 90 patients undergoing vasectomy as day cases is reported. The use of a chlorhexidine gluconate bath or shower on day 1 and day 2 post-operatively reduced the wound infection rate from 37.8 to 6.

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