21 results on '"Marie Louie"'
Search Results
2. Antimicrobial Resistance among Salmonella and Shigella Isolates in Five Canadian Provinces (1997 to 2000)
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Leah J Martin, James Flint, André Ravel, Lucie Dutil, Kathryn Doré, Marie Louie, Frances Jamieson, and Sam Ratnam
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe rates of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) among Salmonella and Shigella isolates reported in five Canadian provinces, focusing on clinically important antimicrobials.
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- 2006
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3. Combined Topical and Oral Antimicrobial Therapy for the Eradication of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (Mrsa) Colonization in Hospitalized Patients
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Scott K Fung, Marie Louie, and Andrew E Simor
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: How to eradicate methicillin-resistant Staphylo-coccus aureus (MRSA) colonization in hospitalized patients is uncertain. We reviewed our experience with MRSA decolonization therapy in hospitalized patients.
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- 2002
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4. Microbiologic Surveillance and Parenteral Antibiotic Use in a Critical Care Unit
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Sharon K Yamashita, Marie Louie, Andrew E Simor, and Anita Rachlis
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate parenteral antibiotic utilization and bacterial resistance patterns in a critical care unit (CrCU).
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- 2000
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5. Cost-effectiveness and efficacy of spa, SCCmec, and PVL genotyping of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus as compared to pulsed-field gel Electrophoresis.
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Vincent Li, Linda Chui, Lisa Louie, Andrew Simor, George R Golding, and Marie Louie
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) is a valuable molecular typing assay used for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) surveillance and genotyping. However, there are several limitations associated with PFGE. In Alberta, Canada, the significant increase in the number of MRSA isolates submitted to the Provincial Laboratory for Public Health (ProvLab) for PFGE typing led to the need for an alternative genotyping method. In this study, we describe the transition from PFGE to Staphylococcus protein A (spa), Staphylococcal cassette chromosome (SCCmec), and Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) typing. A total of 1915 clinical MRSA isolates collected from 2005 to 2009 were used to develop and validate an algorithm for assigning PFGE epidemic types using spa, SCCmec, and PVL typing and the resulting data was used to populate a new Alberta MRSA typing database. An additional 12620 clinical MRSA isolates collected from 2010 to 2012 as part of ongoing routine molecular testing at ProvLab were characterized using the new typing algorithm and the Alberta MRSA typing database. Switching to spa, SCCmec, and PVL from PFGE typing substantially reduced hands-on and turn-around times while maintaining historical PFGE epidemic type designations. This led to an approximate $77,000 reduction in costs from 2010 to 2012. PFGE typing is still required for a small subset of MRSA isolates that have spa types that are rare, novel, or associated with more than one PFGE epidemic type.
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- 2013
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6. Emergence of Penicillin-Resistant Streptococcus Pneumoniae in Southern Ontario, 1993–94
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Andrew E Simor, Anita Rachlis, Lisa Louie, Janet Goodfellow, and Marie Louie
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Objective: To determine the prevalence of resistance of Streptococcus pneumoniae to penicillin and other antimicrobial agents in metropolitan Toronto.
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- 1995
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7. Antimicrobial-Resistant Escherichia coli in Public Beach Waters in Quebec
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Patricia Turgeon, Pascal Michel, Patrick Levallois, Pierre Chevalier, Danielle Daignault, Bryanne Crago, Rebecca Irwin, Scott A McEwen, Norman F Neumann, and Marie Louie
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Human exposure to antimicrobial-resistant bacteria may result in the transfer of resistance to commensal or pathogenic microbes present in the gastrointestinal tract, which may lead to severe health consequences and difficulties in treatment of future bacterial infections. It was hypothesized that the recreational waters from beaches represent a source of antimicrobial-resistant Escherichia coli for people engaging in water activities.
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- 2012
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8. Biological specimens for community-based surveillance studies: Method of recruitment matters
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Brenda L. Coleman, Iris A. Gutmanis, Susan J. Bondy, Allison J. McGeer, Marina I. Salvadori, and Marie Louie
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biological specimens ,data collection ,health surveys ,interviews ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Studies requiring the collection of biological specimens are often difficult to perform and costly. We compare face-to-face and telephone interviews to determine which is more effective for return of self-collected rectal swabs from subjects living in rural and semi-rural areas of Ontario, Canada. People interviewed face-to-face in 2006-2007 were asked to provide a rectal swab while the interviewer waited. Those interviewed by telephone were sent a package and asked to return the swab by mail, with one follow-up reminder call. Telephone interviewing resulted in a higher response rate for the completion of household and individual-level questionnaires. However, face-to-face interviews resulted in a significantly higher proportion of interviewees who returned swabs making the participation rate higher for this mode of contact (33.7 versus 25.0 percent). Using multivariable logistic regression, higher rates of rectal swab return were associated with face-to-face interviewing while adjusting for the impact of household size and respondent age and sex. For studies requiring the submission of intimate biological samples, face-to-face interviews can be expected to provide a higher rate of return than telephone interviews.
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- 2011
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9. Utilization of a molecular serotyping method for Salmonella enterica in a routine laboratory in Alberta Canada
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Marie Louie, Christina Ferrato, Linda Chui, and Robin King
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Serotype ,Salmonella ,030106 microbiology ,Serogroup ,medicine.disease_cause ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Microbiology ,Alberta ,Disease Outbreaks ,Foodborne Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Molecular typing ,Environmental Microbiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Serotyping ,Molecular Biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,biology ,Salmonella enterica ,Alberta canada ,Outbreak ,Routine laboratory ,biology.organism_classification ,nervous system diseases ,Molecular Typing ,Salmonella Infections ,Public Health ,Laboratories - Abstract
Salmonella is one of the most common enteric pathogens related to foodborne illness. Alberta's Provincial Laboratory for Public Health (ProvLab) provides Outbreak and Surveillance support by performing serotyping. The Check&Trace Salmonella™ (CTS) assay (Check-Points, Netherlands), a commercial DNA microarray system, can determine the serotype designation of a Salmonella isolate with automated interpretation. Here we evaluate 1028 Salmonella isolates of human clinical or environmental sources in Alberta, Canada with the CTS assay. CTS was able to assign a serovar to 98.7% of the most frequently occurring human clinical strains in Alberta (82.5% overall), and 71.7% of isolates which were inconclusive by conventional methods. There was 99.7% concordance in environmental isolates. The CTS database has potential to expand to identify rare serovars. With the anticipated shift to molecular methods for identification, CTS provides an easy transition and demonstrates ease-of-use and reduces the turn-around-time of a reported result significantly compared to classical serotyping.
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- 2017
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10. Comparing the epidemiology of hospital-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus clone groups in Alberta, Canada
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Elizabeth Henderson, David Vickers, A. Rusk, S. Bruzzese, Marie Louie, Vincent Li, Joseph Kim, Kathryn Bush, Jenine Leal, Sumana Fathima, and Linda Chui
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Male ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,030106 microbiology ,Population ,030501 epidemiology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Staphylococcal infections ,Alberta ,03 medical and health sciences ,Risk Factors ,Acute care ,Internal medicine ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,medicine ,Humans ,Infection control ,Intensive care medicine ,education ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cross Infection ,education.field_of_study ,Molecular epidemiology ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Staphylococcal Infections ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,Original Papers ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
SUMMARYPatients with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) clones, which were traditionally seen in the community setting (USA400/CMRSA7 and USA300/CMRSA10), are often identified as hospital-acquired (HA) infections using Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) surveillance definitions. This study examined the demographics and healthcare risk factors of patients with HA-MRSA to help understand if community MRSA clones are from a source internal or external to the hospital setting. Despite USA300/CMRSA10 being the predominant clone in Alberta, hospital clones (USA100/CMRSA2) still dominated in the acute care setting. In the Alberta hospitalized population, patients with USA400/CMRSA7 and USA300/CMRSA10 clones were significantly younger, had fewer comorbidities, and a greater proportion had none or ambulatory care-only healthcare exposure. These findings suggest that there are two distinct populations of HA-MRSA patients, and the patients with USA400/CMRSA7 and USA300/CMRSA10 clones identified in hospital more greatly resemble patients affected by those clones in the community. It is possible that epidemiological assessment overidentifies HA acquisition of MRSA in patients unscreened for MRSA on admission to acute care.
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- 2016
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11. Contamination of Canadian private drinking water sources with antimicrobial resistant Escherichia coli
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K. A. Sibley, Danielle Daignault, B. Crago, Anna Majury, Marie Louie, Brenda L. Coleman, Norman F. Neumann, Marina I. Salvadori, Shannon L. Braithwaite, Frances B. Jamieson, Scott A. McEwen, Allison McGeer, and Rebecca Irwin
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Canada ,Veterinary medicine ,Environmental Engineering ,medicine.drug_class ,Antibiotics ,Drug resistance ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antibiotic resistance ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Risk Factors ,Water Supply ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,Escherichia coli ,medicine ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Water Science and Technology ,Civil and Structural Engineering ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,business.industry ,Drinking Water ,Ecological Modeling ,Water Pollution ,Drug Resistance, Microbial ,Contamination ,Antimicrobial ,Pollution ,Biotechnology ,Logistic Models ,Livestock ,Water Microbiology ,business ,Water well - Abstract
Background Surface and ground water across the world, including North America, is contaminated with bacteria resistant to antibiotics. The consumption of water contaminated with antimicrobial resistant Escherichia coli (E. coli) has been associated with the carriage of resistant E. coli in people who drink it. Objectives To describe the proportion of drinking water samples submitted from private sources for bacteriological testing that were contaminated with E. coli resistant to antibiotics and to determine risk factors for the contamination of these water sources with resistant and multi-class resistant E. coli. Methods Water samples submitted for bacteriological testing in Ontario and Alberta Canada were tested for E. coli contamination, with a portion of the positive isolates tested for antimicrobial resistance. Households were invited to complete questionnaires to determine putative risk factors for well contamination. Results Using multinomial logistic regression, the risk of contamination with E. coli resistant to one or two classes of antibiotics compared to susceptible E. coli was higher for shore wells than drilled wells (odds ratio [OR] 2.8) and higher for farms housing chickens or turkeys (OR 3.0) than properties without poultry. The risk of contamination with multi-class resistant E. coli (3 or more classes) was higher if the properties housed swine (OR 5.5) or cattle (OR 2.2) than properties without these livestock and higher if the wells were located in gravel (OR 2.4) or clay (OR 2.1) than in loam. Conclusions Housing livestock on the property, using a shore well, and having a well located in gravel or clay soil increases the risk of having antimicrobial resistant E. coli in E. coli contaminated wells. To reduce the incidence of water borne disease and the transmission of antimicrobial resistant bacteria, owners of private wells need to take measures to prevent contamination of their drinking water, routinely test their wells for contamination, and use treatments that eliminate bacteria.
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- 2013
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12. Agroenvironmental Determinants Associated with the Presence of Antimicrobial-resistant Escherichia coli in Beach Waters in Quebec, Canada
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Marie Louie, B. Crago, Pascal Michel, Pierre Chevalier, Norman F. Neumann, Danielle Daignault, Patrick Levallois, Patricia Turgeon, Rebecca Irwin, and Scott A. McEwen
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Antiinfective agent ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Ecology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Liquid manure ,Contamination ,Antimicrobial ,medicine.disease_cause ,Infectious Diseases ,Antibiotic resistance ,Geography ,Agriculture ,medicine ,business ,Escherichia coli ,Recreation - Abstract
Summary Exposure to microorganisms resistant to antimicrobials may constitute a health risk to human populations. It is believed that one route of exposure occurs when people engage in recreational activities in water contaminated with these microorganisms. The main objective of this study was to explore population-level and environmental determinants specifically associated with the presence of antimicrobial resistant (AMR) generic Escherichia coli isolated from recreational waters sampled from beaches located in southern Quebec, Canada. Water samples originated from the Quebec provincial beach surveillance program for the summers of 2004 and 2005. This study focused on three classes of determinants, namely: agricultural, population-level and beach characteristics for a total of 19 specific factors. The study was designed as a retrospective observational analysis and factors were assessed using logistic regression methods. From the multivariable analysis, the data suggested that the percentage of land used for spreading liquid manure was a significant factor associated with the presence of AMR E. coli (OR = 27.73). Conceptually, broad factors potentially influencing the presence of AMR bacteria in water must be assessed specifically in addition to factors associated with general microbial contamination. Presence of AMR E. coli in recreational waters from beaches in southern Quebec may represent a risk for people engaging in water activities and this study provides preliminary evidence that agricultural practices, specifically spreading liquid manure in agricultural lands nearby beaches, may be linked to the contamination of these waters by AMR E. coli.
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- 2011
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13. Characterization of tetracycline- and ampicillin-resistant Escherichia coli isolated from the feces of feedlot cattle over the feeding period
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Marie Louie, Ron Read, Ranjana Sharma, Tim A. McAllister, Edward Topp, Parasto Mirzaagha, and L. Jay Yanke
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Male ,Tetracycline ,Immunology ,Drug resistance ,Biology ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,Eating ,Feces ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Antibiotic resistance ,Amp resistance ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ,Ampicillin ,Escherichia coli ,Genetics ,medicine ,Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Phylogeny ,Antibacterial agent ,General Medicine ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,chemistry ,Cattle ,MacConkey agar ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The objective of this study was to investigate tetracycline and ampicillin resistance in Escherichia coli isolated from the feces of 50 crossbred steers housed in 5 feedlot pens. The steers were not administered antibiotics over a 246-day feeding period. A total of 216 isolates were selected for further characterization. The E. coli isolates were selected on MacConkey agar or on MacConkey agar amended with ampicillin (50 µg/mL) or tetracycline (4 µg/mL). Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) typing (XbaI digestion), screening against 11 antibiotics, and multiplex PCR for 14 tet and 3 β-lactamase genes were conducted. Prevalence of antimicrobial resistance in E. coli at each sampling day was related both temporally and by pen. Multiplex PCR revealed that tet(B) was most prevalent among tetracycline-resistant isolates, whereas β-lactamase tem1-like was detected mainly in ampicillin-resistant isolates. Our results suggest that antimicrobial resistance in E. coli populations persists over the duration of the feeding period, even in the absence of in-feed antibiotics. Many of the isolates with the same antibiograms had indistinguishable PFGE patterns. Characterization of the factors that influence the nature of this nonselective resistance could provide important information for consideration in the regulation of in-feed antimicrobials for feedlot cattle.
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- 2009
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14. Adverse Events Associated with High-Dose Ribavirin: Evidence from the Toronto Outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
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Janet Raboud, Susan E. Richardson, Tony Mazzulli, Marie Louie, Linda Dresser, Allison McGeer, Mark Loeb, Matthew P. Muller, and Elizabeth Rea
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Adult ,Male ,Canada ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medical Records Systems, Computerized ,ribavirin ,Anemia ,Context (language use) ,severe acute respiratory syndrome ,Antiviral Agents ,Disease Outbreaks ,Cohort Studies ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,Internal medicine ,Bradycardia ,Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Original Research Article ,Intensive care medicine ,Adverse effect ,hemolytic anemia ,Retrospective Studies ,SARS ,Tetany ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Ribavirin ,virus diseases ,Retrospective cohort study ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,adverse events ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,Injections, Intravenous ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,Magnesium Deficiency ,Cohort study - Abstract
Study Objectives. To distinguish adverse events related to ribavirin therapy from those attributable to severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), and to determine the rate of potential ribavirin-related adverse events. Design. Retrospective cohort study. Setting. Hospitals in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Patients. A cohort of 306 patients with confirmed or probable SARS, 183 of whom received ribavirin and 123 of whom did not, between February 23, 2003, and July 1, 2003. Of the 183 treated patients, 155 (85%) received very high-dose ribavirin; the other 28 treated patients received lower-dose regimens. Measurements and Main Results. Data on all patients with SARS admitted to hospitals in Toronto were abstracted from charts and electronic databases onto a standardized form by trained research nurses. Logistic regression was used to evaluate the association between ribavirin use and each adverse event (progressive anemia, hypomagnesemia, hypocalcemia, bradycardia, transaminitis, and hyperamylasemia) after adjusting for SARS-related prognostic factors and corticosteroid use. In the primary logistic regression analysis, ribavirin use was strongly associated with anemia (odds ratio [OR] 3.0, 99% confidence interval [CI] 1.5–6.1, p
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- 2007
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15. Rapid identification of coagulase-negative staphylococci by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy
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Marie Louie, Nassim M. Amiali, Andrew E. Simor, Jacqueline Sedman, Ashraf A. Ismail, and Michael R. Mulvey
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Coagulase ,Microbiology (medical) ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Analytical chemistry ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Chemometrics ,symbols.namesake ,Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared ,medicine ,Humans ,Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy ,Spectroscopy ,Molecular Biology ,Principal Component Analysis ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Glycopeptide ,Fourier transform ,Principal component analysis ,symbols ,Methicillin Resistance ,Algorithms - Abstract
Coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS), frequently associated with both community-acquired and nosocomial bloodstream infections, must be distinguished from Staphylococcus aureus for clinical purposes. Conventional methods are too laborious and time-consuming and often lack sensitivity to CNS. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy combined with the use of a universal growth medium (Que-Bact® Universal Medium No. 2) and chemometrics was evaluated for its potential as a rapid and simple clinical tool for making this distinction. FTIR spectra of 11 methicillin-sensitive and 11 methicillin-resistant CNS isolates as well as 25 methicillin-sensitive, 47 methicillin-resistant, 34 borderline oxacillin-resistant and 35 glycopeptide intermediate S. aureus isolates were obtained from dried films of stationary-phase cells grown on the universal medium. Principal component analysis (PCA), self-organizing maps, and the K-nearest neighbor algorithm were employed to cluster the different phenotypes based on similarity of their FTIR spectra. PCA of the first-derivative normalized spectral data from a single narrow region (2888–2868 cm− 1) yielded complete differentiation of CNS from both methicillin-sensitive and methicillin-resistant S. aureus. The rate of correct classification was somewhat reduced, from 100% to 90%, after inclusion of borderline oxacillin-resistant and glycopeptide intermediate S. aureus strains in the data set. Differentiation based on the data in broader spectral regions was much less reliable. The results of this study indicate that with proper spectral region selection, FTIR spectroscopy and cluster analysis may provide a simple and accurate means of CNS species identification.
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- 2007
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16. Travelers’ Knowledge of Prevention and Treatment of Travelers’ Diarrhea
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Lynn M. McMullen, L. Duncan Saunders, Marie Louie, Paul Hasselback, and Julie Y.M. Johnson
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Adult ,Diarrhea ,Male ,Background information ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Veterinary medicine ,Adolescent ,Traveler's diarrhea ,Developing country ,Alberta ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Environmental health ,Humans ,Medicine ,Health Education ,Mexico ,Travel ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Food safety ,Questionnaire data ,Increased risk ,Female ,Health education ,medicine.symptom ,business ,human activities - Abstract
Background Information regarding the prevention and treatment of travelers’ diarrhea (TD) is available to the public from various sources, such as medical personnel, travel clinics, personal contacts, and the Internet. This type of information may help travelers avoid this illness or help those afflicted minimize its duration. Methods We collected questionnaire data from 104 travelers at departure gates for flights to Mexico from Calgary, Alberta on their knowledge of symptoms and treatment of TD and food risks associated with this illness and sources of information used. Results Almost half reported they received some information on travel-related diseases and on TD prior to the flight. When education level was controlled for, the mean score for people who had obtained information on TD was significantly higher than that for those who did not have such information. College or university-educated travelers scored better than did other travelers. A high proportion of travelers correctly identified risk levels associated with specific foods consumed during travel, and many recognize that they are at an increased risk of acquiring diarrheal illness while traveling in a developing country. Conclusions Information on TD appears to improve the level of knowledge on its prevention and treatment among travelers from southern Alberta.
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- 2006
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17. Transmission of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome during Intubation and Mechanical Ventilation
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William J. Sibbald, Cameron B. Guest, Thomas E. Stewart, Andrew E. Simor, Patrick Tang, Robert A. Fowler, Stephen E. Lapinsky, and Marie Louie
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional ,Health Personnel ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Statistics as Topic ,Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Disease Outbreaks ,Risk Factors ,Occupational Exposure ,Intensive care ,Intubation, Intratracheal ,medicine ,Humans ,Infection control ,Intubation ,Intensive care medicine ,Mechanical ventilation ,Cross Infection ,Infection Control ,business.industry ,High-frequency ventilation ,Respiratory disease ,medicine.disease ,Respiration, Artificial ,Intensive Care Units ,Relative risk ,Emergency medicine ,Breathing ,Female ,business - Abstract
Nosocomial transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome from critically ill patients to healthcare workers has been a prominent and worrisome feature of existing outbreaks. We have observed a greater risk of developing severe acute respiratory syndrome for physicians and nurses performing endotracheal intubation (relative risk [RR], 13.29; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.99 to 59.04; p = 0.003). Nurses caring for patients receiving noninvasive positive-pressure ventilation may be at an increased risk (RR, 2.33; 95% CI, 0.25 to 21.76; p = 0.5), whereas nurses caring for patients receiving high-frequency oscillatory ventilation do not appear at an increased risk (RR, 0.74; 95% CI, 0.11 to 4.92; p = 0.6) compared with their respective reference cohorts. Specific infection control recommendations concerning the care of critically ill patients may help limit further nosocomial transmission.
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- 2004
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18. Surveillance of autopsy cases for D222G substitutions in haemagglutinin of the pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus in Alberta, Canada
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Marie Louie, Steven J. Drews, K.L. Tokaryk, Jennifer May-Hadford, Bonita E. Lee, K. Pabbaraju, Sallene Wong, and Raymond Tellier
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Microbiology (medical) ,Icu patients ,Community control ,viruses ,Mutation, Missense ,receptors ,Hemagglutinin Glycoproteins, Influenza Virus ,Autopsy ,Virus ,Alberta ,Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype ,Influenza, Human ,Pandemic ,Humans ,Medicine ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,business.industry ,pandemic ,Alberta canada ,virus diseases ,General Medicine ,Hemagglutinin ,mutations ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,Amino Acid Substitution ,RNA, Viral ,Mutant Proteins ,Viral disease ,business ,influenza - Abstract
Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus-positive specimens were collected from autopsy patients and matched to pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus-positive nasopharyngeal specimens from community control patients and pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus-positive specimens from intensive-care unit (ICU) patients. Specimens were analysed for polymorphisms at amino acid 222 of the haemagglutinin (HA) glycoprotein. Whereas some specimens from autopsy patients were positive for D222N, none was positive for D222G. All control patient specimens were wild-type D222. D222G polymorphisms were also identified in a subset of ICU patients with admixtures of D222G and D222 and of D222N, D222G and D222 present. The relevance of D222N and D222G to influenza pathogenesis and transmissibility currently remains unclear.
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- 2011
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19. Comparison of a singleplex real-time RT-PCR assay and multiplex respiratory viral panel assay for detection of influenza 'A' in respiratory specimens
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Kanti, Pabbaraju, Sallene, Wong, Bonita, Lee, Raymond, Tellier, Kevin, Fonseca, Marie, Louie, and Steven J, Drews
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Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Nasopharynx ,Influenza, Human ,Humans ,pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus ,swine ,Original Articles ,respiratory viral panel ,Pandemics ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Influenza ,real‐time RT‐PCR - Abstract
Please cite this paper as: Pabbaraju et al. (2011) Comparison of a singleplex real‐time RT‐PCR assay and multiplex respiratory viral panel assay for detection of influenza “A” in respiratory specimens. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 5(2), 99–103. Background Evaluation of different molecular tests for the detection of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus is important before the next wave of the pandemic. Objectives To compare a hydrolysis probe‐based real‐time RT‐PCR assay recommended by the CDC to the xTAG® respiratory viral panel (RVP) (Luminex® Molecular Diagnostics) for the detection of influenza A. Methods Eleven thousand eight hundred and ninety‐eight respiratory specimens were tested by the real‐time RT‐PCR and RVP assays for the detection of influenza A. The distribution of seasonal H1, H3 and pandemic H1N1 subtypes in these specimens was compared. Results The RVP assay was generally unable to identify influenza A–positive samples with a low viral load, whereas the real‐time RT‐PCR assay detected most of these samples resulting in a subset of specimens that could not be confirmed as either seasonal or pandemic influenza A subtypes. Conclusions When the prevalence of influenza A is high, the CDC recommended real‐time RT‐PCR has significant advantages as a frontline assay, namely higher sensitivity and shorter time to reporting a result. Anticipated scenarios would be during the peaks of the pandemic and episodes of seasonal influenza. Furthermore, the better sensitivity of the RT‐PCR makes it the preferred assay to detect influenza in patients with severe respiratory disease tested late in their clinical course. If pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus is not the dominant virus and there is a high proportion of other respiratory viruses circulating, laboratories will be faced with the decision to use the RVP assay for the detection of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus.
- Published
- 2011
20. Distribution and characterization of ampicillin- and tetracycline-resistant Escherichia coli from feedlot cattle fed subtherapeutic antimicrobials
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L. Jay Yanke, Tim A. McAllister, Parasto Mirzaagha, Ranjana Sharma, Edward Topp, and Marie Louie
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Chlortetracycline ,Microbiology (medical) ,Tetracycline ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Biology ,Microbiology ,lcsh:Microbiology ,Antibiotic resistance ,Amp resistance ,Ampicillin ,medicine ,Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis ,Escherichia coli ,Animals ,Animal Husbandry ,Tetracycline Resistance ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Diet ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field ,Molecular Typing ,Feedlot ,North America ,Virginiamycin ,Cattle ,Ampicillin Resistance ,medicine.drug ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Feedlot cattle in North America are routinely fed subtherapeutic levels of antimicrobials to prevent disease and improve the efficiency of growth. This practice has been shown to promote antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in subpopulations of intestinal microflora including Escherichia coli. To date, studies of AMR in feedlot production settings have rarely employed selective isolation, therefore yielding too few AMR isolates to enable characterization of the emergence and nature of AMR in E. coli as an indicator bacterium. E. coli isolates (n = 531) were recovered from 140 cattle that were housed (10 animals/pen) in 14 pens and received no dietary antimicrobials (control - 5 pens, CON), or were intermittently administered subtherapeutic levels of chlortetracycline (5 pens-T), chlortetracycline + sulfamethazine (4 pens-TS), or virginiamycin (5 pens-V) for two separate periods over a 9-month feeding period. Phenotype and genotype of the isolates were determined by susceptibility testing and pulsed field gel electrophoresis and distribution of characterized isolates among housed cattle reported. It was hypothesized that the feeding of subtherapeutic antibiotics would increase the isolation of distinct genotypes of AMR E. coli from cattle. Results Overall, patterns of antimicrobial resistance expressed by E. coli isolates did not change among diet groups (CON vs. antibiotic treatments), however; isolates obtained on selective plates (i.e., MA,MT), exhibited multi-resistance to sulfamethoxazole and chloramphenicol more frequently when obtained from TS-fed steers than from other treatments. Antibiograms and PFGE patterns suggested that AMR E. coli were readily transferred among steers within pens. Most MT isolates possessed the tet(B) efflux gene (58.2, 53.5, 40.8, and 50.6% of isolates from CON, T, TS, and V steers, respectively) whereas among the MA (ampicillin-resistant) isolates, the tem1-like determinant was predominant (occurring in 50, 66.7, 80.3, and 100% of isolates from CON, T, TS, and V steers, respectively). Conclusions Factors other than, or in addition to subtherapeutic administration of antibiotics influence the establishment and transmission of AMR E. coli among feedlot cattle.
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- 2011
21. Effectiveness of Ribavirin and Corticosteroids for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
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Lai-Ming Ho, Thomas Tsang, Benjamin J. Cowling, Matthew P. Muller, Marie Louie, Su-Vui Lo, Eric H. Y. Lau, and Gabriel M. Leung
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Canada ,Propensity score ,MEDLINE ,Effectiveness ,macromolecular substances ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Antiviral Agents ,Severity of Illness Index ,Article ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacotherapy ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,Internal medicine ,Severity of illness ,Ribavirin ,medicine ,Corticosteroids ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Respiratory system ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,digestive system diseases ,3. Good health ,Hospitalization ,chemistry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome ,Propensity score matching ,Hong Kong ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Objective Ribavirin and corticosteroids were used widely as front-line treatments for severe acute respiratory syndrome; however, previous evaluations were inconclusive. We assessed the effectiveness of ribavirin and corticosteroids as the initial treatment for severe acute respiratory syndrome using propensity score analysis. Methods We analyzed data on 1755 patients in Hong Kong and 191 patients in Toronto with severe acute respiratory syndrome using a generalized propensity score approach. Results The adjusted excess case fatality ratios of patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome receiving the combined therapy of ribavirin and corticosteroids within 2 days of admission, compared with those receiving neither treatment within 2 days of admission, were 3.8% (95% confidence interval, −1.5 to 9.2) in Hong Kong and 2.1% (95% confidence interval, −44.3 to 48.5) in Toronto. Conclusions Our results add strength to the hypothesis that the combination of ribavirin and corticosteroids has no therapeutic benefit when given early during severe acute respiratory syndrome infection. Further studies may investigate the effects of these treatments later in disease course.
- Published
- 2009
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