Publications by authors named "On S"

Campylobacter sputorum biovar sputorum is a rarely isolated organism, particularly from human clinical specimens. Its pathogenic potential is unknown. We present here what we believe to be the first report of this organism being isolated from a clinically significant source, an axillary abscess.

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Twenty-one type or other reference strains, each representing a different Campylobacter, Helicobacter, or Arcobacter taxon, and a reference strain of Staphylococcus aureus were used to assess the reproducibility of nine enzyme detection tests used in the identification of campylobacters. For five of the tests (alkaline phosphatase, DNase, and H2S production, indoxyl acetate hydrolysis, and nitrate reduction), more than one procedure was employed to determine the most suitable method. Alkaline phosphatase test results were better defined and more reproducible if read after 1 h of incubation.

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Twenty type or other reference strains, each representing a different Campylobacter, Helicobacter, or Arcobacter taxon, were used to assess the reproducibility of 25 phenotypic tests that are used in the identification of such organisms. Twenty-two of the tests depended on growth inhibition, and each of these tolerance tests was performed by using three different basal media. Although the overall reproducibility of the tests with each basal medium exceeded 89%, the proportion of strains that were able to grow in a reproducible manner on the basal media varied from 100% for blood agar and 50% for nutrient agar to 5% for brucella agar.

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The type strains of six Campylobacter species or subspecies were examined in eight tests used for the identification of such organisms. False-positive results were obtained in certain tests (growth on 1% bile, brilliant green, selenite, trimethylamine-N-oxide, 2,3,5-triphenyl tetrazolium chloride, and minimal media) when an inoculum yielding 10(7) to 10(8) CFU/ml was used. Each tolerance test was examined with blood, nutrient, and brucella agars as basal media.

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Thirty-one strains of Providencia rettgeri (mainly from humans) were characterized by one-dimensional SDS-PAGE of cellular proteins. The strains came from various countries and comprised 14 from urine, eight from faeces, two from bile (plus one from the liver of a sheep), two from sputum, one from an insect pupa and three the sources of which were unknown. Also included, for reference purposes, were the type strains of the four other Providencia species.

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The effects of freezing rate, suspending fluid and age of culture on the ability of four strains of Campylobacter pylori to survive and recover from freeze-drying were examined. Freeze-drying by standard procedures generally resulted in an overall loss in viability of between 3 and 7 log units. The exact cause of poor recovery by C.

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A total of 21 clinical isolates of Campylobacter pylori from Peru and the United Kingdom and two reference strains (from Australia), including the type strain (NCTC 11637T), were characterized by high resolution one-dimensional SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of cellular proteins. The protein patterns contained more than 40 discrete bands and the approximate molecular weights of the major bands were 22, 27, 46, 57, 60, 65 and 93 kD. The total patterns were used as the basis of numerical analysis.

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