4 research outputs found

    Pneumocystis pneumonia.

    No full text
    Pneumocystis jiroveci is a common cause of pneumonia in South African patients with AIDS. Sulphonamide resistance may become a problem in South Africa, as patients are treated with prophylactic co-trimoxazole when their CD4 counts fall below 200 cells/microliter. Failure of prophylaxis and treatment has been observed, possibly due to infection with sulphonamide-resistant strains. Sulphonamide resistance has been reported elsewhere, and is due to point mutations at codons 55 and 57 of the dihydropteroate synthase gene. Strain typing is useful for molecular epidemiological purposes.Articl

    Prevalence of genital mycoplasmas, ureaplasmas and chlamydia in pregnancy

    No full text
    The study was designed to determine the prevalence of genital mycoplasmas, ureaplasmas and Chlamydia on women attending their first prenatal visit, in conjunction with pre-term labour or HIV status. For pre-term labour (2003), 199 women were monitored for pre-term delivery (<37 weeks); for colonisation and HIV (2005), 219 women were screened. Microbial detection was performed on DNA extracted from endocervical swabs employing PCR techniques. Colonisation was seen to be highest in the 1420 year age group from 2003. In women aged ≄21 years, co-colonisation was 13, although there was a shift from co-colonisation with Mycoplasma hominis and Ureaplasma urealyticum in 2003, to other dual/triple combinations in 2005. Overall, major trends from both collection periods were that the prevalence of U. urealyticum tended to be higher in women ≄26 years, while the prevalence of Chlamydia trachomatis and M. hominis lower. No association was evident between colonisation with M. hominis, U. urealyticum, Ureaplasma parvum and labour outcome. HIV status had no effect on the prevalence/co-colonisation of M. hominis, U. urealyticum or C. trachomatis. The importance of genital mycoplasmas, ureaplasmas and C. trachomatis in long-term aetiologies requires further investigations, certainly in relation to syndromic management regimens that fail to reduce colonisation rates. © 2009 Informa Healthcare USA, Inc.Articl

    Search for gravitational waves from binary black hole inspiral, merger, and ringdown

    Get PDF
    We present the first modeled search for gravitational waves using the complete binary black-hole gravitational waveform from inspiral through the merger and ringdown for binaries with negligible component spin. We searched approximately 2 years of LIGO data, taken between November 2005 and September 2007, for systems with component masses of 1–99M⊙ and total masses of 25–100M⊙. We did not detect any plausible gravitational-wave signals but we do place upper limits on the merger rate of binary black holes as a function of the component masses in this range. We constrain the rate of mergers for 19M⊙≀m1, m2≀28M⊙ binary black-hole systems with negligible spin to be no more than 2.0  Mpc−3 Myr−1 at 90% confidence
    corecore