6 results match your criteria: "St. Raphael Ophthalmological Center[Affiliation]"
JAMA Ophthalmol
May 2024
St Raphael Ophthalmological Center, Ophthalmological Ambulance, Mbuji Mayi, Democratic Republic of Congo.
Ecohealth
December 2017
MTA-ELTE-MTM Ecology Research Group, Pazmany Str. 1/C, Budapest, 1117, Hungary.
African pythons (Pythonidae) and large vipers (Bitis spp.) act as definitive hosts for Armillifer armillatus and Armillifer grandis parasites (Crustacea: Pentastomida) in the Congo Basin. Since the proportion of snakes in bushmeat gradually increases, human pentastomiasis is an emerging zoonotic disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfect Genet Evol
November 2017
Evolutionary Systems Research Group, MTA Centre for Ecological Research, Tihany, Hungary; Institute of Biology, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary; Parmenides Center for the Conceptual Foundations of Science, Pullach, Munich, Germany. Electronic address:
The recently proposed Microbiome Mutiny Hypothesis posits that members of the human microbiome obtain information about the host individuals' health status and, when host survival is compromised, switch to an intensive exploitation strategy to maximize residual transmission. In animals and humans, sepsis is an acute systemic reaction to microbes invading the normally sterile body compartments. When induced by formerly mutualistic or neutral microbes, possibly in response to declining host health, sepsis appears to fit the 'microbiome mutiny' scenario except for its apparent failure to enhance transmission of the causative organisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Microbiol
July 2015
St. Raphael Ophthalmological Center, Ophthalmological Ambulance, Mbuji Mayi, Democratic Republic of Congo.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis
July 2014
St. Raphael Ophthalmological Center, Ophthalmological Ambulance, Mbuji Mayi, Democratic Republic of Congo.
Ocular pentastomiasis is a rare infection caused by the larval stage of pentastomids, an unusual group of crustacean-related parasites. Zoonotic pentastomids have a distinct geographical distribution and utilize reptiles or canids as final hosts. Recently, an increasing number of human abdominal infections have been reported in Africa, where pentastomiasis is an emerging, though severely neglected, tropical disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Infect Dis
August 2013
St Raphael Ophthalmological Center of Mbuji Mai, Democratic Republic of Congo.