Publications by authors named "Nachum R"

Fine motor movement is a demonstrated biomarker for many health conditions that are especially difficult to diagnose early and require sensitivity to change in order to monitor over time. This is particularly relevant for neurodegenerative diseases (NDs), including Parkinson's Disease (PD) and Alzheimer's Disease (AD), which are associated with early changes in handwriting and fine motor skills. Kinematic analysis of handwriting is an emerging method for assessing fine motor movement ability, with data typically collected by digitizing tablets; however, these are often expensive, unfamiliar to patients, and are limited in the scope of collectible data.

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Shelter in place (SIP) orders were instituted by states to alleviate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, states proceeded to reopen as SIPs were noted to be hurting the economy. We evaluated whether these reopenings affected COVID-19 hospitalizations.

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We studied fecal colonization with vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) in 89 HIV-infected nonhospitalized patients ages 24 to 62 years, including 70 (79%) men (including 41 homosexual and 5 bisexual men) and 19 (21%) women. Of the 89 patients, 61 (69%) were black, 25 (28%) Hispanic, and 3 (3%) white; 53 (60%) had history of ongoing or recent antibacterial therapy with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (29), clarithromycin (18), amoxicillin (7), ofloxacin (3), and metronidazole, doxycycline, dicloxacillin, and cephalexin (1 each). VRE were not isolated from any of the patients studied.

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Chronic Q fever has been associated with endocarditis, granulomatous hepatitis, and osteomyelitis but only rarely with pregnancy. The apparent predilection of Coxiella burnetii, the organism causing Q fever, for the human placenta suggests that chronic Q fever of pregnancy is due to placentitis. We describe a patient with chronic, clinically apparent Q fever in pregnancy and a successful outcome.

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LAL assay is a rapid and reliable and easy to perform and interpret urine screen for clinically significant gram-negative bacteriuria. Chromogenic assays are rapid (5 min) and obviate problems associated with gel endpoints, such as inadvertant dissolution of the gel, either during incubation or reading. LAL urine screening is characterized by both high positive and negative predictive values.

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Selected ion-monitoring gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was used for detection of beta-hydroxy fatty acids as an independent assay for the presence or absence of endotoxin in materials claimed to induce nonspecific activation of Limulus amoebocyte lysate. To this end, suspensions of gram-negative and -positive bacteria, one fungal species, cerebrospinal fluid, and hollow-fiber hemodialyzer rinses were assayed for endotoxin by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and the Limulus amoebocyte lysate assay. Good qualitative agreement was shown for both methods when suspensions of test organisms were assayed.

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A chromogenic Limulus amoebocyte lysate assay, performed at room temperature, was evaluated for rapid detection (five minutes) of asymptomatic bacteriuria of pregnancy. Development of a distinctive yellow color was used to detect urines containing greater than 10(5) gram-negative bacteria per milliliter. One thousand thirty-nine urine samples were obtained from 664 obstetric patients, with 86 of the specimens shown to contain greater than 10(5) gram-negative urinary tract pathogens.

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In 33 cases of Campylobacter jejuni septicemia, the disease was more common at the extremes of age: infants made up a third of the reported cases while 24% of patients were older than 50 years. Fever was noted in more than 80% of patients and chills in about a fourth. Enteritis was present in 70% of cases, and the gastrointestinal tract was the principal source of septicemia.

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A chromogenic Limulus amoebocyte lysate assay was evaluated as a rapid screening test for the detection of clinically significant gram-negative bacteriuria. The development of a distinctive yellow color after the addition of chromogenic substrate to the Limulus amoebocyte lysate-urine reaction mixture was used to measure greater than or equal to 10(5) gram-negative bacteria per ml. A total of 324 urine specimens were assayed, with 68 gram-negative urinary tract infections identified as defined by quantitative urine colony counts of greater than or equal to 10(5) bacteria per ml.

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A 52-year-old man was admitted to the hospital with headache, confusion, and early papilledema. He was receiving prednisone and azathioprine for interstitial pulmonary fibrosis. A right temporoparietal cerebral abscess was diagnosed by computed tomographic scan, brain scan, and cerebral angiography.

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The Limulus amoebocyte lysate (LAL) test was evaluated for rapid detection of gram-negative bacteriuria in an adult patient population. Time to gelation of a standard LAL preparation was used as a measure of significant (greater than 10(5) bacteria per ml) gram-negative bacteriuria, and the results of 190 LAL assays were compared with quantitative urine cultures. Initially, 33 of 36 urine specimens containing greater than 10(5) gram-negative bacteria per ml were detected by LAL assay.

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The limulus lysate assay was utilized to detect and quantitate endotoxin in cerebrospinal fluid from 232 patients with suspected meningitis. The assay was positive in initial specimens of CSF from all 86 patients with gram-negative bacterial meningitis and was uniformly negative in the remaining 146 patients with a variety of infectious and noninfectious processes. Endotoxin concentrations in initial specimens of CSF from patients with gram-negative meningitis ranged from 4 to 2,000 ng/ml.

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The Limulus amebocyte lysate assay was used to detect the presence of bacterial endotoxin in a variety of chemotherapeutic agents currently in use. Results were quantitated using a standard Escherichia coli endotoxin curve. Relative concentrations of endotoxin ranging from 0.

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