15 research outputs found

    Psittacosis in Manitoba

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    Paired blood specimens submitted to the Virus Laboratory, between January and September 1970, from 200 patients with a lower respiratory tract infection were examined for antibodies to the psittacosis-human pneumonitis group antigen. A high static titre of antibodies was found in four patients and a rising titre in three. The illness varied in the seven patients, tending to be severe, chronic and recurrent. All patients recovered following a course of antibiotic therapy which was repeated in four; treatment tended to be inadequate since the diagnosis of psittacosis was made retrospectively. The likely source of the infection in four of the patients was budgerigars, in one it was pigeons, in one it was a canary as well as a pigeon, and in one the source was not identified. Two additional patients had a fairly high static titre of antibodies to the psittacosis-human pneumonitis antigen but were excluded from this report since they showed a diagnostic increase in antibodies to a respiratory virus during the course of their illness; both patients had an avian contact and are being followed up

    A Survey of Rubella Antibodies in Health Personnel and a Report of Vaccine Trial

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    Five hundred and seventy female health science personnel between the ages of 18 and 25 years were examined for antibodies to the rubella virus by the hemagglutination inhibition technique. Approximately 90% of the subjects had a titre of 1:20 or higher. The geometric mean titre of the positive sera was 1:251. Sixty-four of the 77 persons with an antibody of 1:20 or less volunteered to take the vaccine and were examined six weeks later for the development of antibodies. The conversion rate for the 51 persons who were negative at the dilution of 1:20 at the outset was 94%; the rate of antibody increment for the 13 persons who were positive at 1:20 at the outset was 77%. Among the 51 persons who developed antibodies, the geometric mean titre was 1:57 and among the other 13 it was 1:49. Although the trial was conducted in adult females, the number of side effects from the vaccine was remarkably scanty and insignificant. This trial would seem to emphasize the importance of avoiding the use of rubella vaccine in women of child-bearing age without first excluding pregnancy with meticulous care and using active and controllable contraceptive methods for the two months following vaccination

    Foodborne gastroenteritis due to Norwalk virus in a Winnipeg hotel.

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    Within 1 week four separate incidents of gastroenteritis presumed to be foodborne were reported by guests of a Winnipeg hotel. Investigation revealed poor food-handling practices and illness among the kitchen staff. Elevated bacterial counts and Escherichia coli were found in 15 of 24 samples of food tested, and Staphylococcus aureus was isolated from 2 pastry samples. Culture of 14 stool samples for bacteria yielded Clostridium perfringens in 1 sample from a staff member and coagulase-positive S. aureus in 2 samples from staff members and 3 from guests. All of the S. aureus isolates were nonenterotoxigenic and had three different phage patterns. Electron microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy revealed the prototype Norwalk virus in five (56%) of nine stool samples; four samples were from guests, and one was from a kitchen employee. The employee had had diarrhea 24 hours before the first outbreak and was thus believed to be the source of the virus infection, possibly through food handling. This is the first report of Norwalk virus isolation and the first of foodborne Norwalk virus transmission in Canada. A review of foodborne Norwalk virus infections is presented
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