Publications by authors named "T Elmros"

Tissue metal net cages were implanted subcutaneously in BALB/cJ and C3H/Tif mice as an experimental model of Borrelia burgdorferi infection. B. burgdorferi sensu stricto strain Sh2-82 could be isolated up to 14 weeks after the inoculation.

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Contact allergy to a wound dressing with an adhesive mass consisting of colophony, zinc oxide and rubber (Mezinc) was studied in 179 patients with a history of eczema. 12 patients were found to be allergic to colophony, whereas only 4 of these patients also showed a positive patch test reaction to the wound dressing. 14 patients with verified moderate contact allergy to colophony were patch tested with adhesive mass (10%), Portuguese colophony (10%), zinc oxide (10%), purified resin acids (10%), and Portuguese colophony (10%), in combination with zinc oxide.

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The effect of zinc oxide on S. aureus (209 P) was studied in steel net tissue cages implanted subcutaneously in guinea pigs and rabbits. Zinc oxide installed in the tissue cages created high, sustained concentrations of zinc in the cage fluid throughout the study.

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The antibacterial effects of rosins and resin acids were studied in vitro using three methods, disc diffusion on agar, agar dilution, and broth dilution. Rosin and some resin acids had antibacterial effects that were restricted to Gram-positive bacteria. The abietic type of acids had a more pronounced antibacterial activity than the pimaric and labdane acids when the disc diffusion method was used but there was no inhibition of growth of Gram-negative bacteria.

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Antibacterial activity, zinc concentrations and pH were measured in Müller-Hinton broth containing different amounts of zinc oxide and inoculated with Staphylococcus aureus (10(6) colony forming units/ml). The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of zinc oxide to different clinical isolates were determined using the Müller-Hinton agar dilution tests. Gram-positive bacteria were most susceptible.

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