290 research outputs found
Bacteriological analysis of Periplaneta americana L. (Dictyoptera; Blattidae) and Musca domestica L. (Diptera; Muscidae) in ten districts of Tangier, Morocco
In this study, Periplaneta americana and Musca domestica were collected from ten districts in Tangier, to isolate and identify some bacteria from their body using selective media. The results indicate that theamounts of bacteria were different between the districts. Moreover, the bacteria isolated from body of American cockroaches differed from those of the houseflies. These findings show that American cockroaches and houseflies may carry pathogenic bacteria in the urban areas of Tangier
Distributed Control for Non-Cooperative Systems Under Conjugation Conditions
In this paper, the distributed control for non-cooperative elliptic systems under conjugation conditions is established. First, the existence and uniqueness of the state for these systems with Dirichlet and conjugation conditions is proved, then the set of equations and inequalities that characterizes the distributed control of these systems is found. The non-cooperative Neumann systems with conjugation conditions is also discussed
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Molecular characterisation of an Acinetobacter baumannii outbreak
Background: Acinetobacter baumannii are problematic hospital pathogens, and the increased incidence of multi drug resistance has significantly limited treatment options. The global epidemiology is not fully characterised due to large data gaps from low- and middle-income countries. This study characterised the molecular epidemiology of an A. baumanniii outbreak in Egypt.
Methods: Fifty-four A. baumannii isolates were recovered from a 4-month-outbreak at Tanta University Hospitals (TUH). Associated clinical and demographic data, and the antibiogram were analysed, and carbapenem resistant isolates were screened for acquired carbapenemase genes by PCR and sequencing. Epidemiological typing was performed by single-locus sequencing of blaOXA-51-like and Multi Locus Sequence Typing (MLST), and sequence types (STs) were analysed based on maximum-likelihood phylogeny (PhyML) to identify relatedness.
Findings: Immune suppression and ICU admission were the most common co-morbidity and risk factor. Carbapenem resistance accounted for 81%, and correlated with the presence of OXA-23, NDM-1 and -2, and VIM-1 and -2 carbapenemases. Nine different blaOXA-51-like genes were identified which corresponded to 22 different Sequence Types (STs), including 10 novel. International clone (IC2) was the predominant clone. PhyML analysis revealed the presence of 2 distinct clones with multiple sub-lineages.
Conclusion: Given the short duration of the study, there was a rare heterogeneous population in the hospital. Carbapenem resistance is mediated by acquired carbapenemases in diverse lineages indicating the possibility of horizontal gene transfer. The diversity indicates the influx of multiple lineages of IC2 into TUH from unknown sources. Molecular epidemiological studies are essential for infection prevention and control measures
Stem cells and metformin synergistically promote healing in experimentally induced cutaneous wound injury in diabetic rats
Introduction. Diabetes mellitus (DM) is a serious, chronic metabolic disorder commonly complicated by diabetic foot ulcers with delayed healing. Metformin was found to have a wound healing effect through several mechanisms. The current study investigated the effect of both bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs) and metformin, considered alone or combined, on the healing of an experimentally induced cutaneous wound injury in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats.Material and methods. Forty adult male albino rats were used. Diabetes was induced by single intravenous (IV) injection of streptozotocin (STZ). Next, two circular full thickness skin wounds were created on the back of the animals, then randomly assigned into 4 groups, ten rats each. BM-MSCs were isolated from albino rats, 8 weeks of age and labeled by PKH26 before intradermal injection into rats of Group III and IV. Groups I (diabetic positive control), II (metformin-treated, 250 mg/kg/d), III (treated with 2×106 BM-MSCs), and IV (wounded rats treated both with metformin and BM-MSCs cells). Healing was assessed 3, 7, 14, and 21 days post wound induction through frequent measuring of wound diameters. Skin biopsies were obtained at the end of the experiment.Results. Gross evaluation of the physical healing of the wounds was done. Skin biopsies from the wound areas were processed for hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), Masson’s trichrome staining and immunohistochemical staining for CD31. The results showed better wound healing in the combined therapy group (IV) as compared to monotherapy groups.Conclusions. Although both metformin and BM-MSCs were effective in the healing of experimentally induced skin wounds in diabetic rats, the combination of both agents appears to be a better synergistic option for the treatment of diabetic wound injuries
SHA 059. Comparative study of the cardioprotective effects of local and remote preconditioning in ischemia/reperfusion injury
Evaluation of Effectiveness between Two Different Facilities for Drinking Water Having Different Water Sources for Removal of Free-Living Amoeba in Qalyubia Governorate, Egypt
Background: Conventional drinking water treatment plants (CDWTPs) and Ground water (GWTP) are the main 2 types of drinking water treatment using freshwater as a source for drinking water in Egypt.
Objective: The Egyptian standards for drinking water denied the presence of any type of living protozoa in drinking water produced for human use.
Martials and methods: 48 water bodies were selected from Benha and Kaha districts in Qalyubia Governorate, Egypt. Mean turbidity, pH, conductivity, temperature, ammonia, nitrite, iron, manganese, magnesium and residual chlorine were recorded in each water body from two sites. Centrifuged samples were cultured on non-nutrient agar plates with Escherichia coli. Positive sample isolates were subjected to DNA extraction and polymerase chain reaction using genus and speciesspecific primers targeting the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) and Mp2CL5 gene.
Results: The prevalence of Naegleria species, N. fowleri and Acanthamoeba in the study area were 54.1% and 0% (N. fowleri and Acanthamoeba) of all sample examined. The removal of free-living amoebae from drinking water, it was shown that conventional DWTP (Benha) could get rid of 91% of FLAs present in the raw untreated water, while ground DWTP removed only 55.6% of these organisms.
Conclusions: The conventional drinking water treatment system for surface water was better than that of only chlorine disinfection for ground water in removing free-living amoeba (FLAs). In general, the persistence of FLAs in drinking tap water unfortunately exerts public health hazards
Occult hepatitis B infection in egyptian chronic hepatitis C patients: prevalence, impact on pegylated interferon/ribavirin therapy
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