6 results match your criteria: "U.S. Air Force Institute for Environment[Affiliation]"

An Aedes aegypti-specific, fluorogenic probe hydrolysis (Taq-Man), polymerase chain reaction assay was developed for real-time screening using a field-deployable thermocycler. Laboratory-based testing of A. aegypti, A.

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Rapid identification of dengue virus by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction using field-deployable instrumentation.

Mil Med

December 2005

Epidemiological Surveillance Division, U.S. Air Force Institute for Environment, Safety, and Occupational Health Analysis, Brooks Air Force Base (now designated Air Force Institute for Operational Health, Brooks City-Base), San Antonio, TX 78235-5237, USA.

Dengue virus universal and dengue serotype 1 to 4, fluorogenic probe hydrolysis (TaqMan), reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assays were developed for screening and serotype identification of infected mosquito vectors and human sera using a field-deployable, fluorometric thermocycler. Dengue universal and dengue 1 to 4 serotype assay in vitro sensitivity and specificity results were 100% concordant when tested with total nucleic acid extracts of multiple strains of dengue serotype 1 to 4, yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis, West Nile, and St. Louis encephalitis viruses.

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Two field trials for commercially available and experimental mosquito traps variously baited with light, carbon dioxide, octenol, or combinations of these were evaluated in a malarious area at Paekyeon-Ri near Tongil-Chon (village) and Camp Greaves, Paju County, Kyonggi Province, Republic of Korea. The host-seeking activity for common mosquito species was determined using hourly aspirator collections from a human- and propane lantern-baited Shannon trap. The total number of mosquitoes and number of each species captured during the test were compared using 8 x 8 and 5 x 5 Latin square designs based on trap location.

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Exposures to 1,6-hexamethylene diisocyanate during polyurethane spray painting in the U.S. Air Force.

Appl Occup Environ Hyg

September 2000

Industrial Hygiene Branch, U.S. Air Force Institute for Environment, Safety and Occupational Health Risk Analysis, Brooks Air Force Base, Texas, USA.

1,6-Hexamethylene diisocyanate (HDI) exposures were measured during polyurethane enamel spray painting at four Air Force bases. Breathing zone samples were collected for HDI monomer and polyisocyanates (oligomers) using three sampling methods: NIOSH Method 5521, the Iso-Chek sampler, and the total aerosol mass method (TAMM). Exposures to HDI monomer are low when compared to current occupational exposure limits; the highest 8-hr time-weighted average (TWA) exposure found was 3.

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The Department of Defense laboratory-based global influenza surveillance system.

Mil Med

July 2000

U.S. Air Force Institute for Environment, Safety and Occupational Health Risk Analysis, Epidemiological Surveillance Division, Brooks Air Force Base, TX 78235-5241, USA.

Military global influenza surveillance began in 1976 as an Air Force program. In 1997, the Department of Defense (DoD) Global Emerging Infections Surveillance and Response System expanded the program to include all services. Also included were local residents in areas where DoD overseas research activities operated.

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