Ann Agric Environ Med
September 2024
Background: In the context of reported resurgence of pertussis in the last decade, researchers hypothesized that acellular (aP) pertussis vaccines elicit a shorter-lived protection compared to whole-cell (wP) pertussis vaccines. However, in the studies seeking to demonstrate this hypothesis, exposure to each vaccine type was not concurrent, and contradictory epidemiologic modeling questioned its validity. The context of pertussis vaccination history in Poland, with both vaccine types used concurrently in comparable proportions, provided an opportunity to investigate this hypothesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe study describes four cases of tularaemia - one developed after contact with rabbits and three developed after an arthropod bite. Due to non-specific clinical symptoms, accurate diagnosis of tularaemia may be difficult. The increasing contribution of the arthropod vectors in the transmission of the disease indicates that special effort should be made to apply sensitive and specific diagnostic methods for tularaemia, and to remind health-care workers about this route of Francisella tularensis infections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The clinical presentation of atypical pneumonia is often similar to the presentation of more typical bacterial pneumonias and the etiological agent must be confirmed by laboratory diagnosis. This article will discuss the problems in the serological diagnosis of atypical pneumonia caused by Legionella pneumophila and Mycoplasma pneumoniae which are the agents most commonly associated with atypical pneumonia. Specifically, seeking the possibility of non-specific response, we evaluated the prevalence of antibodies to M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe causative agent of tetanus is the obligate anaerobic bacterium--Clostridium tetani. These bacteria form endospores that are able to survive long periods of exposure to air and other adverse environmental conditions. Infection generally occurs through wound contamination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The present study was aimed at determining the IgG subclass distribution against pertussis toxin (PT) and filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA) of Bordetella pertussis in patients with whooping cough.
Methods: The total number of 222 serum samples obtained from patients suspected in clinical investigation for pertussis were tested separately by in-house ELISA for the presence of IgG antibodies to pertussis toxin and filamentous hemagglutinin. The percentage distribution of specific anti-PT and anti-FHA IgG subclass response was calculated only on the basis of group of sera confirmed in the present study as positive for total IgG antibodies (183 sera to PT antigen and 129 to FHA antigen).
Introduction: In presented study we investigated the effect of multiple freeze-thaw cycles of human sera on the determination of IgA, IgG and IgM antibodies to selected bacterial antigens.
Methods: A panel of 15 serum samples with elevated levels of antibodies to Mycoplasma peumoniae, Yersinia enterocolitica and Salmonella spp. were used (5 positive sera for each pathogen).
Introduction: Bordetella parapertussis is a bacterium closely related to Bordetella pertussis, also causes a pertussis - like symptoms in humans. Because of unsatisfactory level of routine microbiological diagnosis of B. parapertussis infections in Poland most of parapertussis cases are not reported.
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