This study describes the course of an OXA-48-producing Enterobacteriaceae (OPE) outbreak that started in March 2012 in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) in Jerusalem, Israel. During the peak of the outbreak (January to August 2012), there were 49 patients who had proven or suspected acquisition of OPE in the NICU, including 16 with invasive infections, out of a total of 156 patients who were hospitalized during that period. Three children hospitalized in the pediatric ICU were identified as carriers of OPE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA previous survey of the seroprevalence of the herpes virus type 2 (HSV-2) infection in Israel provided us with an opportunity to study a) the prevalence of human papillomavirus (HPV) 16/18 in selected groups of women; b) the correlation between the infection with HSV-2, HPV-16/18 and Papanicolaou (PAP) pathology; and c) to identify groups of women who might benefit from routine PAP screening. Four different population groups of women aged 17-60 years were studied: groups 1 and 2 comprised healthy women government employees and kibbutz and moshav residents, respectively, and groups 3 and 4 comprised Jewish and non-Jewish women with gynecological complaints. In women without gynecological problems the prevalence of HPV-16/18 was 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSixteen patients (mean age 68 years) with mild to moderate hypertension were treated with either diltiazem or hydrochlorothiazide for 6 weeks, followed by enalapril for a further 6 weeks. A second group of 40 patients (mean age 71 years) was treated with either hydrochlorothiazide or enalapril for 12 weeks; nonresponders received both drugs for 8 weeks. Treatment with hydrochlorothiazide or enalapril resulted in a lowering of systolic and diastolic blood pressures, but diastolic pressure was lower in patients treated with enalapril (89 +/- 2 and 82 +/- 2 mm Hg, respectively; p less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA study in 1984 of the colonization rates of Group B beta hemolytic streptococci (GBS) in 257 Jewish and 189 Arab parturient women revealed rates of 5.4 and 1.6% respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Genet
February 1989
A family is described in which four subjects in two sibships had typical split hand/foot malformation. The possibility of the existence of a rare autosomal recessive form of the malformation is discussed, as well as a two locus model. In the two locus model the dominant mutation leading to the split hand/foot malformation is controlled by a gene at another locus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a family with five daughters, three suffered from primary amenorrhea. The diagnosis of familial idiopathic gonadotropin deficiency (FIGD) was established. The entire family underwent HLA evaluation, and no linkage between the HLA and FIGD was found.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Haematol
September 1987
We report the occurrence of megaloblastic hematopoiesis with peripheral microcytosis in a beta-thalassemic heterozygote who developed profound anemia secondary to folate deficiency. The folate deficiency was precipitated by prolonged therapy with diphenylhydantoin. In thalassemic heterozygotes who develop anemia, the possibility of a megaloblastic pathogenesis should be pursued even when the RBC indices maintain their microcytic-hypochromic expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpidemiological studies have revealed the widely varied prevalence of Paget's disease of bone. The highest rates have been found in parts of England. The disease has been reported only infrequently in Jews and no previous studies of prevalence have been performed in the Middle East or Asia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA retrospective study on the incidence of congenital rubella (CR) in the past 10 years in the Jerusalem area was conducted. After the 1972 epidemic, which resulted in 48 cases of congenital rubella, few sporadic cases of CR appeared each year, and in the 1978-79 period the number of CR cases was relatively small. Immunity to rubella in different categories of population (children 3 months to 18 years, college students, nurses in pediatric, newborn and intensive care units, student nurses, and women of childbearing age) was determined by hemolysis in gel (HIG) and hemagglutination inhibition (HI) methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the epidemiology of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in women and neonates in the Jerusalem area. During the 6-month period from January to June 1982, we recorded the presence of antibody to CMV in pregnant and parturient Jewish and Arab women from West and East Jerusalem, respectively, in 18- to 22-year-old female students at a religious college, in female university students, in 18- to 22-year-old student nurses, and in the nursing staff of the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit in our hospital. In the 18- to 22-year-old age-group, the religious college students not working in a medical setting had the lowest rate of seropositivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbu Ghosh is a highly inbred community of more than 2000 Israeli Arabs in which all members are descendants of two brothers and in which individual blood pressures, rates of hypertension, and corresponding morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular disease are inordinately high. Accordingly, patterns of familial aggregation of blood pressure were investigated to determine if the population structure of this community might affect familial aggregation. In a study of children aged 2-14 years, significant familial aggregation of blood pressure was found in 797 children in 220 families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIsr J Med Sci
September 1978
Abu Ghosh is an Israeli Moslem Arab village located 11 km west of Jerusalem. Its population of about 2,200 has a common ancestry and is highly inbred. Blood pressures, weights, heights and other pertinent data were recorded for 1,881 (93.
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