Publications by authors named "Jallat C"

A retrospective case-control study with a small population group revealed that, among clinical signs, vomiting but not diarrhea was significantly associated with the presence of diffusely adhering Escherichia coli (DAEC) in children suffering from gastroenteritidis (P < 0.05). Of the children carrying DAEC strains, those who were F1845 DNA probe positive had a significantly longer hospital stay than those who were F1845 DNA probe negative.

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A total of 335 Escherichia coli strains were isolated from sporadic cases of aqueous diarrhoea in patients hospitalized in Clermont-Ferrand, France, during 1991 and 1992. Many of these strains belonged to the diffusely adhering E. coli (DAEC) group, since 51 of them (15.

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The CS31A antigen was first described for septicemic and enterotoxigenic bovine E. coli strains. In our study, of 597 human Escherichia coli strains isolated from diarrheagenic stools of hospitalized patients, 30 (5%) hybridized with the CS31A DNA probe.

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Two hundred sixty-two strains of Escherichia coli isolated from diarrheal stool specimens from infants, children, and adults hospitalized in Clermont-Ferrand, France, were studied to classify them in the previously described pathogenic groups of E. coli involved in diarrheal diseases. A total of 1.

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Klebsiella pneumoniae strains involved in hospital outbreaks of nosocomial infections, such as suppurative lesions, bacteremia, and septicemia, were resistant to multiple antibiotics including broad-spectrum cephalosporins. Epidemiologic investigations revealed that the reservoir for these K. pneumoniae strains was the gastrointestinal tracts of the patients.

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We studied the effect of subinhibitory concentrations of cefuroxime on the capacity of Haemophilus influenzae to adhere to buccal epithelial cells (BEC). Two encapsulated strains (serotype b) and two nonencapsulated, nontypable strains were studied. All four strains adhered strongly to BEC, with indices (mean number of bacteria adhering to a single BEC) ranging from 19 to 48.

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The adhesion of 19 nontypable strains and 3 typable (type b) Haemophilus influenzae to human cells was examined using buccal epithelial cells (BEC), the continuous HEp-2 cell line and human 0 erythrocytes. The strains were classified into three phenotypes, according to their adhesive properties. Phenotype 1 consists of strains that adhere to both buccal epithelial cells and HEp-2 cells.

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