4 research outputs found

    Plot showing absence of correlation between soluble Cr levels in hand-washing samples and children’s age for both CCA and non-CCA playgrounds

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    <p><b>Copyright information:</b></p><p>Taken from "Chromium on the Hands of Children After Playing in Playgrounds Built from Chromated Copper Arsenate (CCA)–Treated Wood"</p><p>Environmental Health Perspectives 2005;114(3):460-465.</p><p>Published online 6 Oct 2005</p><p>PMCID:PMC1392243.</p><p>This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original DOI.</p> Results are for Cr levels (ng) as determined by ICP-MS analysis of the hand-washings of 63 children who played in eight CCA and 64 children who played in eight non-CCA playgrounds. Correlation coefficients are = 0.24 (CCA: = 104 + 611) and = 0.35 (non-CCA: = 86 + 241)

    Genomic comparison of VRE isolates.

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    <p><b>(A)</b> Conserved sequence blocks generated by HarvestTools 1.1.2 to construct the phylogenetic tree. <b>(B)</b> A second phylogeny was performed on more closely related strains, to refine the Recipient-Donor clade. Isolates with the hypervariable groupings shown in <b>(C)</b> share the same color in both phylogenies. <b>(C)</b> A 40kb interval from the donor strain spanning the hypervariable chromosomal locus was extracted and homologous sequence blocks were obtained from each isolate. Each colored block corresponds to syntenic interval between strains, and isolates are grouped by primary syntenic block order. The red recipient block (outlined in black) corresponds to a mobile element gene insertion of an IS<i>1251</i>-like element. The corresponding genes in the Recipient genomic interval are shown below.</p

    Genomic confirmation of vancomycin-resistant <i>Enterococcus</i> transmission from deceased donor to liver transplant recipient

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    <div><p>In a liver transplant recipient with vancomycin-resistant <i>Enterococcus</i> (VRE) surgical site and bloodstream infection, a combination of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, multilocus sequence typing, and whole genome sequencing identified that donor and recipient VRE isolates were highly similar when compared to time-matched hospital isolates. Comparison of <i>de novo</i> assembled isolate genomes was highly suggestive of transplant transmission rather than hospital-acquired transmission and also identified subtle internal rearrangements between donor and recipient missed by other genomic approaches. Given the improved resolution, whole-genome assembly of pathogen genomes is likely to become an essential tool for investigation of potential organ transplant transmissions.</p></div

    Agarose gel showing SmaI digestion patterns of strains via PFGE.

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    <p><b>(A)</b> PFGE gel of VRE 5, 6, 7, VRE Recipient and VRE Donor isolates with ramped pulse times of 2s to 28s to resolve higher-molecular weight fragments. <b>(B)</b> Same as A but with ramped pulse times of 2s to 7s to resolve low-molecular weight fragments. Asterisks (*) indicate missing or variable DNA band sizes among isolates. Arrows indicate the corresponding higher resolution DNA band area in panel B relative to panel A. </p
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