25 research outputs found
Sharing more than friendship - nasal colonization with coagulase-positive staphylococci (CPS) and co-habitation aspects of dogs and their owners
Background Since the relationship between dogs and their owners has changed,
and dogs moved from being working dogs to family members in post-industrial
countries, we hypothesized that zoonotic transmission of opportunistic
pathogens like coagulase positive staphylococci (CPS) is likely between dogs
and their owners. Methodology/Principal Findings CPS- nasal carriage,
different aspects of human-to-dog relationship as well as potential
interspecies transmission risk factors were investigated by offering nasal
swabs and a questionnaire to dog owners (108) and their dogs (108) at a dog
show in 2009. S. aureus was found in swabs of 20 (18.5%) humans and two dogs
(1.8%), and spa types which correspond to well known human S. aureus lineages
dominated (e.g. CC45, CC30 and CC22). Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) of the
two canine strains revealed ST72 and ST2065 (single locus variant of ST34).
Fifteen dogs (13.9%) and six owners (5.6%) harboured S. pseudintermedius,
including one mecA-positive human isolate (MRSP). Pulsed field gel
electrophoresis (PFGE) revealed that one dog/owner pair harboured
indistinguishable S. pseudintermedius- isolates of ST33. Ten (48%) of the 21
S. pseudintermedius-isolates showed resistance towards more than one
antimicrobial class. 88.9% of the dog owners reported to allow at least one
dog into the house, 68.5% allow the dog(s) to rest on the sofa, 39.8% allow
their dogs to come onto the bed, 93.5% let them lick their hands and 52.8% let
them lick their face. Bivariate analysis of putative risk factors revealed
that dog owners who keep more than two dogs have a significantly higher chance
of being colonized with S. pseudintermedius than those who keep 1–2 dogs
(p<0.05). Conclusions/Recommendations In conclusion, CPS transmission between
dog owners and their dogs is possible. Further investigation regarding
interspecies transmission and the diverse adaptive pathways influencing the
epidemiology of CPS (including MRSA and MRSP) in different hosts is needed
Sharing More than Friendship — Nasal Colonization with Coagulase-Positive Staphylococci (CPS) and Co-Habitation Aspects of Dogs and Their Owners
BACKGROUND: Since the relationship between dogs and their owners has changed, and dogs moved from being working dogs to family members in post-industrial countries, we hypothesized that zoonotic transmission of opportunistic pathogens like coagulase positive staphylococci (CPS) is likely between dogs and their owners. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: CPS- nasal carriage, different aspects of human-to-dog relationship as well as potential interspecies transmission risk factors were investigated by offering nasal swabs and a questionnaire to dog owners (108) and their dogs (108) at a dog show in 2009. S. aureus was found in swabs of 20 (18.5%) humans and two dogs (1.8%), and spa types which correspond to well known human S. aureus lineages dominated (e.g. CC45, CC30 and CC22). Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) of the two canine strains revealed ST72 and ST2065 (single locus variant of ST34). Fifteen dogs (13.9%) and six owners (5.6%) harboured S. pseudintermedius, including one mecA-positive human isolate (MRSP). Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) revealed that one dog/owner pair harboured indistinguishable S. pseudintermedius- isolates of ST33. Ten (48%) of the 21 S. pseudintermedius-isolates showed resistance towards more than one antimicrobial class. 88.9% of the dog owners reported to allow at least one dog into the house, 68.5% allow the dog(s) to rest on the sofa, 39.8% allow their dogs to come onto the bed, 93.5% let them lick their hands and 52.8% let them lick their face. Bivariate analysis of putative risk factors revealed that dog owners who keep more than two dogs have a significantly higher chance of being colonized with S. pseudintermedius than those who keep 1-2 dogs (p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS/RECOMMENDATIONS: In conclusion, CPS transmission between dog owners and their dogs is possible. Further investigation regarding interspecies transmission and the diverse adaptive pathways influencing the epidemiology of CPS (including MRSA and MRSP) in different hosts is needed
A New Adaptive Algorithm for the Polygonization of Noisy Imagery
This report introduces a novel adaptive image segmentation algorithm which represents images by polygonal segments and which is particularly suitable for the segmentation of noisy imagery. At first we suggest an intuitive generative model and its associated cost function. The cost function ca
Combined Color And Texture Segmentation by Parametric Distributional Clustering
Unsupervised image segmentation can be formulated as a clustering problem in which pixels or small image patches are grouped together based on local feature information. In this contribution, parametric distributional clustering (PDC) is presented as a novel approach to image segmentation based on color and texture clues. The objective function of the PDC model is derived from the recently proposed Information Bottleneck framework (Tishby et al. [8]), but it can equivalently be formulated in terms of a maximum likelihood solution. Its optimization is performed by deterministic annealing. Segmentation results are shown for natural wildlife imagery