Publications by authors named "P Maximescu"

Phage typing of the available diphtheria strains from epidemics and isolated diphtheria infections in the Federal Republic of Germany since 1975 showed that the various waves of the disease were caused by pathogenic strains which differed from each other in lysis type and lysogenetic spectrum. The individual regional outbreaks, therefore, were not epidemiologically interlinked. Both a high incidence of diphtheria cases and isolated cases occurring in a particular region and within the same time period, however, were caused by the same pathogen with identical lysis type and lysogenetic pattern.

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A toxigenic strain of Corynebacterium diphtheriae mitis was isolated from a 10-week-old baby with membranous tonsillitis, and over the next 6 months thirty-nine symptom-free carriers of nitrate-positive mitis strains were found. All carriers were cleared by 14 days' treatment with erythromycin, though several relapsed after a 5-day course. Four contacts carried both toxigenic and non-toxigenic mitis strains; epidemiological evidence and phage studies suggest that these had a common origin.

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An investigation of 272 non-human primates (75 Macacca cynomolgus, 97 Macacca mulatta and 100 Cercopithecus aethiops) revealed a high incidence of respiratory disease caused by Corynebacterium ulcerans, Staphylococci, Diplococci and Streptococci. Escherichia coli was also found as a secondary invader. Most of the infections occurred during winter in Macaca cynomolgus and were caused by Corynebacterium ulcerans and Diplococcus pneumoniae.

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