Kidney transplant recipients are at increased risk of opportunistic infections and malignancy, including space-occupying intracranial lesions. Here, we present a case of a patient presenting with multiple intracranial lesions in the context of a distant history of transplantation. MRI findings were consistent with a large subcortical enhancing lesion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis
March 2023
The study aims to characterise the species identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) results of Nocardial isolates from adult patients across major public hospitals in Queensland, Australia, over a 15-year period. A multi-centre retrospective observational study of Nocardia sp. isolates was conducted from 7 major public hospitals in Queensland, Australia, over a 15-year period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSentinel hospital surveillance was instituted in Australia to detect the presence of pandemic group A Streptococcus strains causing scarlet fever. Genomic and phylogenetic analyses indicated the presence of an Australian GAS emm12 scarlet fever isolate related to United Kingdom outbreak strains. National surveillance to monitor this pandemic is recommended.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNaturally acquired immunity to malaria is robust and protective against all strains of the same species of This develops as a result of repeated natural infection, taking several years to develop. Evidence suggests that apoptosis of immune lymphocytes due to uncontrolled parasite growth contributes to the slow acquisition of immunity. To hasten and augment the development of natural immunity, we studied controlled infection immunization (CII) using low-dose exposure to different parasite species (, , or ) in two rodent systems (BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice) and in human volunteers, with drug therapy commencing at the time of initiation of infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFResistance to last-line polymyxins mediated by the plasmid-borne mobile colistin resistance gene () represents a new threat to global human health. Here we present the complete genome sequence of an -positive multidrug-resistant strain (MS8345). We show that MS8345 belongs to serotype O2:K1:H4, has a large 241,164-bp IncHI2 plasmid that carries 15 other antibiotic resistance genes (including the extended-spectrum β-lactamase ) and 3 putative multidrug efflux systems, and contains 14 chromosomally encoded antibiotic resistance genes.
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