Publications by authors named "Jacobs N"

Six patients with Clostridium septicum sepsis seen at Duke University Medical Center over a two-year period also had other abnormalities, consisting of hematologic disorders in 3 and colon tumors in 3. Three patients died of sepsis; 2 survived following disarticulation of the arm to control gas gangrene, while the sixth patient survived the sepsis but died of metastatic disease. When anaerobic cultures are positive for C.

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Twenty-three patients with disseminated gonococcal infections--15 with acute tenosynovitis, six with septic monoarticular arthritis, and two with both--were randomly given five days of erythromycin stearate or estolate, 500 mg orally every six hours (13 patients), or crystalline aqueous penicillin G potassium, 1 million units intravenously every three hours for three days (ten patients). There were no treatment failures. Cultures taken one and seven days and two and four weeks after completion of therapy were uniformly negative.

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Diarrhea with fever was a significant complaint in 26 of 280 (9.3%) of non-SS children with S. pneumoniae bacteremia and four of 30 (13%) children with sickle syndromes and S.

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Nine infants less than 2 months of age with group B streptococcal (GBS) osteomyelitis or septic arthritis, or both, were seen from January 1975 through January 1978. The infants had local joint signs, usually in the absence of systemic signs. The bones and joints involved were equally distributed between proximal humerus and proximal and distal femur.

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In a ten-year period we identified 305 hospitalized children with a pneumococcal bacteremia. From these children 293 pneumococcal isolates were serotyped, and 90% belonged to a group of 11 "prevalent serotypes." These 11 serotypes were the prevalent serotypes isolated from children in all disease categories, as well as from children with sickle-cell disease.

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In our hospital Haemophilus influenzae type B seems to be a common cause of acute childhood pneumonia. In the past five years, 34 children with acute Haemophilus pneumonia were identified. Although these children generally had an uncomplicated segmental pneumonia associated with a bacteremia, 13 of the children had pneumonia with a pleural effusion.

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Normal human locomotion.

Prosthet Orthot Int

April 1979

A study of normal locomotion requires an understanding of both the movements and the force actions involved. This is equally true in appreciating the problems of pathological gait. The gait cycle is described in terms of the significant events which occur during both the stance and swing phases.

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We have described a case of pneumonia caused by Corynebacterium CDC Group D2 which was diagnosed by Gram stain of a specimen obtained by transtracheal aspiration and recovery of the organisms from the aspirate specimen in pure culture. Treatment with penicillin was successful.

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A late step in anaerobic heme synthesis, the oxidation of protoprophyrinogen with fumarate as electron acceptor, was studied in extracts and particles of Escherichia coli mutants deficient in quinones or cytochromes. Mutants specifically deficient in menaquinone did not couple protoporphyrinogen oxidation to fumarate reduction, whereas mutants containing menaquinone but deficient in either ubiquinone or cytochromes exhibited this activity. These findings indicate that this coupled reaction is dependent upon menaquinone as hydrogen carrier but independent of ubiquinone and cytochromes.

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An isolate of Chlamydia trachomatis obtained from a man with nongonococcal urethritis was used to produce experimental urethral and pharyngeal infections in chimpanzees. After urethral inoculation of 8 X 10(1) inclusion-forming units (IFU), infections were established in three of three animals; urethral discharges developed in two. The infections persisted for five to nine weeks.

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The arginine-hypoxanthine-uracil auxotype has been linked with the propensity of gonococci to cause disseminated infections. Gonococci recovered from 25 patients with disseminated gonococcal infections were compared with gonococci recovered from matched controls, patients with uncomplicated gonorrhea selected during the same month. Minimal inhibitory concentrations of penicillin, tetracycline, erythromycin, and ampicillin, and the nutritional requirements (auxotypes) for proline alone, arginine alone, arginine, hypoxanthine and uracil together, serine alone and cysteine-cystine (wild type) were analyzed by discriminant analysis.

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Nine infants with early-onset Haemophilus sepsis were seen between January 1973 and July 1977. Of the five isolated strains that were typed, only one was type B. All infants had respiratory distress, metabolic acidosis, and large alveolar-arterial oxygen tension difference gradients.

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Pigment was produced in stab cultures by 97% of 297 group B streptococci isolated from human clinical specimens. The pigment, which was associated with a membranous cell fraction, showed a four-banded absorption spectrum similar to that of a carotenoid, with maxima at 435, 566, 485, and 525 nm. Addition of glucose to the growth medium suppressed pigment production in most strains.

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Subcutaneous tissue cavities in mice and guinea pigs were infected with human isolates of Ureaplasma urealyticum and Mycoplasma hominis. The minimal infective dose for M. hominis was as low as less than 10 color-changing units (CCU) for mice and 10(2) CCU for guinea pigs.

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A new colony type of Neisseria gonorrhoeae was detected in the primary cultures from 8 of 180 men with gonococcal urethritis. This colony type contrasts with those previously described by having a rough and irregular surface. In six of the eight cases, the rough form predominated.

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The penultimate step in heme biosynthesis, the oxidation of protoporphyrinogen to protoporphyrin, can be anaerobically coupled to the reduction of fumarate in extracts of anaerobically-grown Escherichia coli. This coupling is approximately 90% inhibied by 2-heptyl-4-hydroxy quinoline-N-oxide (HQNO), a known inhibitor of the electron transport chain. This observation suggests that the mechanism of the anaerobic oxidation of protoporphyrinogen in E.

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A simple, adequately evaluated serologic test is not now available for use in gonorrhea screening programs. Some of the factors responsible for the relatively low sensitivity and specificity of serologic tests for gonorrhea as compared to cultural techniques are discussed. These include the time required for development of an immunologic response after infection, cross-reactivity with other antigens, and the persistence of antibody after therapy.

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Nitrate can serve as anaerobic electron acceptor for the oxidation of protoporphyrinogen to protoporphyrin in cell-free extracts of Escherichia coli grown anaerobically in the presence of nitrate. Two kinds of experiments indicated this: anaerobic protoporphyrin formation from protoporphyrinogen, followed spectrophotometrically, was markedly stimulated by addition of nitrate; and anaerobic protoheme formation from protoporphyrinogen, determined by extraction procedures, was markedly stimulated by addition of nitrate. In contrast, anaerobic protoheme formation from protoporphyrin was not dependent upon addition of nitrate.

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