24 research outputs found

    Adamantane-Resistant Influenza Infection During the 2004–05 Season

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    Adamantane-resistant influenza A is an emerging problem, but infections caused by resistant and susceptible viruses have not been compared. We identified adamantane resistance in 47% of 152 influenza A virus (H3N2) isolates collected during 2005. Resistant and susceptible viruses caused similar symptoms and illness duration. The prevalence of resistance was highest in children

    Clinician Knowledge and Beliefs after Statewide Program to Promote Appropriate Antimicrobial Drug Use

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    In 1999, Wisconsin initiated an educational campaign for primary care clinicians and the public to promote judicious antimicrobial drug use. We evaluated its impact on clinician knowledge and beliefs; Minnesota served as a control state. Results of pre- (1999) and post- (2002) campaign questionnaires indicated that Wisconsin clinicians perceived a significant decline in the proportion of patients requesting antimicrobial drugs (50% in 1999 to 30% in 2002; p<0.001) and in antimicrobial drug requests from parents for children (25% in 1999 to 20% in 2002; p = 0.004). Wisconsin clinicians were less influenced by nonpredictive clinical findings (purulent nasal discharge [p = 0.044], productive cough [p = 0.010]) in terms of antimicrobial drug prescribing. In 2002, clinicians from both states were less likely to recommend antimicrobial agent treatment for the adult case scenarios of viral respiratory illness. For the comparable pediatric case scenarios, only Wisconsin clinicians improved significantly from 1999 to 2002. Although clinicians in both states improved on several survey responses, greater overall improvement occurred in Wisconsin

    Effects of harvest date and growth stage on triticale forages in the southwest United States: Agronomic characteristics, nutritive value, energy density, and in vitro disappearance of dry matter and fiber

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    Recently, there has been increased interest in including triticale (X Triticosecale Wittmack) or other winter cereals within forage programs throughout the southwest United States. Our objectives were to screen 14 diverse triticale cultivars for agronomic and nutritive characteristics with specific emphasis on identifying normal, as well as deviant, responses to the calendar date and plant maturity for forages seeded in December and harvested from late February throughout May at Maricopa, AZ. Fourteen cultivars were established in a randomized complete block design with each cultivar represented within each of three field blocks. Plots were clean tilled and established on December 18, 2018, and then harvested at 2-wk intervals beginning on February 27 and ending May 23, 2019. Across all harvest dates, forage (N = 315) energy density (NEL) exhibited strong negative correlations with growth stage (r = -0.879), plant height (r = -0.913), head weight (r = -0.814), and estimated dry matter (DM) yield (r = -0.886) but was positively associated with percentages of leaf (r = 0.949), and weakly associated with percentages of the stem (r = 0.138). Through April 10, similar correlations were observed within individual harvest dates (N = 45) for growth stage, leaf percentage, and plant height but not for stem or head-weight percentages. Within later harvest dates, only sporadic correlations with NEL were observed. Primarily cubic regression relationships for neutral detergent fiber, acid detergent lignin, 30- and 48-h in vitro disappearance of DM and fiber, and NEL were fit for the mean or typical cultivar using both days from February 1 and growth stage as independent variables. Coefficients of determination (R2 ≥ 0.860) in all cases indicated a good fit for the polynomial models. For NEL, deviation from the typical cultivar when days from February 1 was used as the independent regression variable was largely affected by cultivar maturation rate. When the growth stage was substituted as the independent variable, plant height, stem percentage beginning at anthesis, and low grain-head percentage were associated with the maximum negative deviant cultivar (Merlin Max). The 0.23 Mcal/kg difference between maximum positive and negative deviant cultivars at a common late-boot/early-heading stage of growth suggests that some attention should be placed on cultivar selection as well as forage inventory needs and overall cropping goals. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society of Animal Science 2022.Recently, there has been increased interest in using triticale within forage programs in the southwest United States. Our objectives were to screen 14 triticale cultivars for agronomic and nutritive value characteristics with specific emphasis on identifying typical, as well as deviant, responses to the calendar date and plant maturity. Regression relationships for neutral detergent fiber, acid detergent lignin, 30- and 48-h in vitro disappearance of dry matter and fiber, and net energy of lactation (NEL) were fit for the mean or typical cultivar using both days from February 1 or growth stage at harvest as independent regression variables. Deviant cultivars usually demonstrated rapid or slow maturation rates, which were often accompanied by physical characteristics reflective of advanced or slow maturation, respectively. Overall, there were a limited number of cultivars that deviated from typical with respect to NEL, but the total range in energy density at a common late-boot/early-heading stage of growth (0.23 Mcal/kg) suggests that some attention should be placed on cultivar selection, especially when specific cultivars display atypical growth characteristics, such as greater canopy height. However, either positive or negative deviation with respect to energy density may be desirable depending on the energy needs of the targeted livestock class.Public domain articleThis item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at [email protected]

    Use of Streptogramin Growth Promoters in Poultry and Isolation of Streptogramin-Resistant Enterococcus faecium from Humans

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    Background. Virginiamycin use in poultry selects for Enterococcus faecium with cross-resistance to quinupristindalfopristin, a drug for vancomycin-resistant E. faecium in humans. We conducted an epidemiologic study of poultry exposures as risk factors for human carriage of quinupristin-dalfopristin-resistant E. faecium. Methods. Rectal or fecal samples for E. faecium testing were obtained from 567 newly admitted hospital patients and 100 healthy vegetarians. Participants were interviewed regarding poultry exposure. Retail poultry washes (160 conventional and 26 antibiotic free) were also tested for the presence of E. faecium. Constitutive and inducible quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance were assessed in E. faecium isolates, and resistance genes were identified by polymerase chain reaction. Results. E. faecium was isolated from 105 patients, 65 vegetarians, and 77 conventional and 23 antibiotic-free poultry washes. Constitutive quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance was absent in human E. faecium, but 56% of conventional poultry isolates were quinupristin-dalfopristin resistant. Inducible quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance was more common in samples from patients than in those from vegetarians and in washes of conventional than antibiotic-free poultry. Higher poultry consumption was associated with inducible quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance. vatE was present in 38% of E. faecium isolates from patients and none from vegetarians. Touching raw poultry was associated with the presence of vatE. Conclusions. Poultry exposure is associated with a quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance gene and inducible quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance in human fecal E. faecium. The continued use of virginiamycin may increase the potential for streptogramin-resistant E. faecium infection in humans
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