Helicobacter (H.) pylori-induced gastritis is a risk factor for gastric cancer (GC). Deleted-in-liver-cancer-1 (DLC1/ARHGAP7) inhibits RHOA, a downstream mediator of virulence factor cytotoxin-A (CagA) signalling and driver of consensus-molecular-subtype-2 diffuse GC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZ Evid Fortbild Qual Gesundhwes
December 2020
Introduction: The current COVID-19 pandemic reveals the dangerousness of infectious diseases and the threats we face. Often however, effective vaccinations are carried out insufficiently. In March 2020, the German measles protection law was introduced to raise the level of population (herd) immunity to over 95 %.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Antibiotic prophylaxis in patients with liver cirrhosis and upper gastrointestinal bleeding significantly reduces the risk of concomitant bacterial infections and early mortality. The goal of our study was to determine the current status of antibiotic prophylaxis in departments of gastroenterology in Germany.
Methods: Representatives of gastroenterology departments were asked to provide data about indication for, and duration of, antibiotic prophylaxis and choice of antibiotic in esophageal varices bleeding in patients with liver cirrhosis.
Z Evid Fortbild Qual Gesundhwes
August 2019
Background: The increased use of antibiotics leads to a rise in drug-resistant bacteria. It is critical to reduce inadequate prescribing of antibiotics in order to prevent a post-antibiotic era.
Aim Of The Study: To explore if healthcare providers in Germany have access to current treatment guidelines, information about antibiotics and local resistance data at their workplace and how they access the information in their daily routine.
Background: Globalization and climate change increase the likelihood of a global spread of high consequence infectious diseases.
Objectives: We analyzed how outpatient physicians in Germany were prepared to recognize and handle potential Ebola virus-infected patients during the recent Ebola outbreak in West Africa.
Materials And Methods: Outpatient physicians participated in 2 anonymous surveys (n=166 and 129, respectively) and were asked, among others, about their knowledge of Ebola virus disease, their subjective perception of their own knowledge and the practical implementation in their daily routine.
Background: The aim of this study was to identify clinical risk factors for antimicrobial resistances and multidrug resistance (MDR) in urinary tract infections (UTI) in an emergency department in order to improve empirical therapy.
Methods: UTI cases from an emergency department (ED) during January 2013 and June 2015 were analyzed. Differences between patients with and without resistances towards Ciprofloxacin, Piperacillin with Tazobactam (Pip/taz), Gentamicin, Cefuroxime, Cefpodoxime and Ceftazidime were analyzed with Fisher's exact tests.
Introduction: Actinomycosis is a rare chronic infectious disease caused by Gram-positive anaerobic bacteria that normally colonize the bronchial system and gastrointestinal tract in humans. The most common diseases associated with actinomycosis are orocervicofacial, thoracic and abdominal infections involving Actinomyces israelii. Due to its rarity, its various clinical presentations and often-infiltrative characteristics in radiological imaging, it can easily be mistaken for other clinical conditions, including malignancy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Microbiol
February 2014
This study focuses on the impact of actin on adhesion and translocation of Enterococcus (E.) faecalis OG1RF, E. faecalis Symbioflor(®), and E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Students in German medical schools frequently complain that the subject 'clinical examination' is not taught in a satisfying manner due to time constraints and lack of personnel resources. While the effectiveness and efficiency of practice-oriented teaching in small groups using near-peer teaching has been shown, it is rarely used in German medical schools. We investigated whether adding a new near-peer teaching course developed with student input plus patient examination under supervision in small groups improves basic clinical examination skills in third year medical students compared to a traditional clinical examination course alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Regular student evaluations at the Technical University Munich indicate the necessity for improvement of the clinical examination course. The aim of this study was to examine if targeted measures to restructure and improve a clinical examination course session lead to a higher level of student satisfaction as well as better self-assessment of the acquired techniques of clinical examination.
Methods: At three medical departments of the Technical University Munich during the 2010 summer semester, the quantitative results of 49 student evaluations (ratings 1-6, German scholastic grading system) of the clinical examination course were compared for a course before and a course after structured measures for improvement.
Bacillus cereus causes food poisoning and serious non-gastrointestinal-tract infections. Non-hemolytic enterotoxin (Nhe), which is present in most B. cereus strains, is considered to be one of the main virulence factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCaveolin-1 (Cav1) is a scaffold protein and pathogen receptor in the mucosa of the gastrointestinal tract. Chronic infection of gastric epithelial cells by Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is a major risk factor for human gastric cancer (GC) where Cav1 is frequently down-regulated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Microbes use directed motility to colonize harsh and dynamic environments. We discovered that Helicobacter pylori strains establish bacterial colonies deep in the gastric glands and identified a novel protein, ChePep, necessary to colonize this niche. ChePep is preferentially localized to the flagellar pole.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground & Aims: Matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) mediate pathogenesis of chronic intestinal inflammation. We characterized the role of the gelatinase (GelE), a metalloprotease from Enterococcus faecalis, in the development of colitis in mice.
Methods: Germ-free, interleukin-10-deficient (IL-10(-/-)) mice were monoassociated with the colitogenic E faecalis strain OG1RF and isogenic, GelE-mutant strains.
Helicobacter pylori infection is the most common bacterial infection worldwide and is strongly associated with gastric oncogenesis. Recently, we discovered that the H. pylori protein CagA, a risk factor for carcinogenesis, consists of two distinct membrane-targeting domains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a fatal disease with poor patient outcome often resulting from late diagnosis in advanced stages. To date methods to diagnose early-stage PDAC are limited and in vivo detection of pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN), a preinvasive precursor of PDAC, is impossible. Using a cathepsin-activatable near-infrared probe in combination with flexible confocal fluorescence lasermicroscopy (CFL) in a genetically defined mouse model of PDAC we were able to detect and grade murine PanIN lesions in real time in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhereas the final differentiation of conventional dendritic cells (CDCs) from committed precursors occurs locally in secondary lymphoid or peripheral tissues, plasmacytoid dendritic cells (PDCs) are thought to fully develop in the bone marrow from common DC progenitors before migrating to the periphery. In our study, we define, for the first time, a subpopulation of CCR9(-) major histocompatibility complex class II(low) PDCs in murine bone marrow, which express E2-2 and are immediate precursors of CCR9(+) fully differentiated PDCs. However, CCR9(-) PDCs have the plasticity to acquire the phenotype and function of CD11b(+) CD8α(-) major histocompatibility complex class II(high) CDC-like cells under the influence of soluble factors produced by intestinal epithelial cells or recombinant GM-CSF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Helicobacter pylori protein CagA (cytotoxin-associated gene A) is associated with an increased risk for gastric cancer formation. After attachment to epithelial cells, the bacteria inject CagA via a type IV secretion apparatus into host cells, where it exerts its biological activity. Host cell responses to intracellular CagA have been linked exclusively to signaling motifs in the C terminus of the CagA protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: E-cadherin is a major component of adherens junctions. Impaired expression of E-cadherin in the small intestine and colon has been linked to a disturbed intestinal homeostasis and barrier function. Down-regulation of E-cadherin is associated with the pathogenesis of infections with enteropathogenic bacteria and Crohn's disease.
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