4 results match your criteria: "6th Floor University Hospital of Wales[Affiliation]"
Antibiotics (Basel)
March 2023
Department of Medical Microbiology, Division of Infection and Immunity, Cardiff University, 6th Floor University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff CF14 4XN, UK.
or group B streptococcus (GBS) is a leading cause of neonatal sepsis and increasingly found as an invasive pathogen in older patient populations. Beta-lactam antibiotics remain the most effective therapeutic with resistance rarely reported, while the majority of GBS isolates carry the tetracycline resistance gene in fixed genomic positions amongst five predominant clonal clades. In the UK, GBS resistance to clindamycin and erythromycin has increased from 3% in 1991 to 11.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Microbiol
February 2022
Center for Microbiological Sciences Research, Sciences Institute, Autonomous University of Puebla, Puebla, Mexico.
Acquired resistance against the antibiotics that are active against species has been described. Diagnostics combined with antimicrobial sensitivity testing are required for therapeutic guidance. To report the prevalence of antimicrobial resistance among Cuban isolates and the related molecular mechanisms of resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntibiotics (Basel)
November 2021
Division of Infection and Immunity, Department of Medical Microbiology, Cardiff University, 6th Floor University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff CF14 4XN, UK.
Lefamulin is the first of the pleuromutilin class of antimicrobials to be available for therapeutic use in humans. Minimum inhibitory concentrations of lefamulin were determined by microbroth dilution for 90 characterised clinical isolates (25 , 25 and 40 ). All isolates possessed lefamulin MICs of ≤0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2020
Tommy's Centre for Maternal and Fetal Health at the MRC Centre for Reproductive Health, Queen's Medical Research Institute, University of Edinburgh, 47 Little France Cresent, Edinburgh, EH16 4TJ, UK.
Around 40% of preterm births are attributed to ascending intrauterine infection, and Ureaplasma parvum (UP) is commonly isolated in these cases. Here we present a mouse model of ascending UP infection that resembles human disease, using vaginal inoculation combined with mild cervical injury induced by a common spermicide (Nonoxynol-9, as a surrogate for any mechanism of cervical epithelial damage). We measure bacterial load in a non-invasive manner using a luciferase-expressing UP strain, and post-mortem by qPCR and bacterial titration.
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