57 research outputs found

    Biofilm production and antibiotic resistance of human and veterinary Staphylococcus strains.

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    Staphylococcus spp. is widely distributed in medical and veterinary pathology and represents one of the most important causes of infection. Many strains are antibiotic-resistant even for the presence of an eso-polysaccharide matrix. The aim of this work was to individuate, among 396 different Staphylococci of human and animal origin, the slime producing strains and to correlate the presence of bioïŹlm to the resistance to eight antibiotics. A total of 185 coagulase negative staphylococci (CNS) and 211 S. aureus isolated from different sources and identiïŹed with Sceptor System, were tested for antibiotic susceptibility (Kirby Bauer method) and for slime production (Polystyrene plates – stained with Alcian blue – Spectrophotometric reading at 450 nm). The strains were classiïŹed as weak, strong and no slime-producing on the basis of OD results. The results were submitted to statistical analysis using Student’s t-test and chi-square tests. Evaluating the differences of slime production among medical and veterinary strains, we found different statistical frequencies (P > 0.001). No statistical differences wereobtained between S. aureus and the other CNS. Instead, the statistical analysis on S. epidermidis vs. the other staphylococci has shown no statistical differences among average values using Student’s ttest (P < 0.052) and signiïŹcant frequency differences using chi square tests (P < 0.02). Finally in the CNS, between S. epidermidis and the other strains, no statistical differences were found. The relation between slime production and the origin of strains was evaluated and no correlation was found. About the correlation between antibiotic-resistance and slime production a resistance increment of about 30% was obtained in strongly slime producing strains. Staphylococcus spp. is often involved in nosocomial infections as complication of post-surgery wounds, catheters and orthopaedic devices. The presence of antibiotic-resistant strains interferes in the therapy successes and seems to be strictly related to bioïŹlm production beyond that genetically acquired. Human and veterinary strains have shown a similar behaviour towards bioïŹlm production and antibiotic-resistance. The results conïŹrm that S. epidermidis is one of the most slime-producer and introduce S. aureus as a new high slime-producer

    Confinement and the photon propagator in 3D compact QED: a lattice study in Landau gauge at zero and finite temperature

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    On the lattice we study the gauge boson propagator of three dimensional compact QED in Landau gauge at zero and non-zero temperature. The non-perturbative effects are taken into account by the generation of a mass, by an anomalous dimension and by the photon wave function renormalization. All these effects can be attributed to the monopoles: they are absent in the propagator of the singularity-free part of the gauge field. We assess carefully the Gribov copy problem for the propagator and the parameters emerging from the fits.Comment: 25 pages, 32 figures, RevTeX 4; version in print in Phys. Rev. D; typos and figures 5c and 7c correcte

    Gluon Propagator in the Infrared Region

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    The gluon propagator is calculated in quenched QCD for two different lattice sizes (16^3x48 and 32^3x64) at beta=6.0. The volume dependence of the propagator in Landau gauge is studied. The smaller lattice is instrumental in revealing finite volume and anisotropic lattice artefacts. Methods for minimising these artefacts are developed and applied to the larger lattice data. New structure seen in the infrared region survives these conservative cuts to the lattice data. This structure serves to rule out a number of models that have appeared in the literature. A fit to a simple analytical form capturing the momentum dependence of the nonperturbative gluon propagator is also reported.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, using RevTeX. Submitted to Phys. Rev. D. This and related papers can also be obtained from http://www.physics.adelaide.edu.au/~jskuller/papers

    The Gluon Propagator without lattice Gribov copies

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    We study the gluon propagator in quenched lattice QCD using the Laplacian gauge which is free of lattice Gribov copies. We compare our results with those obtained in the Landau gauge on the lattice, as well as with various approximate solutions of the Dyson Schwinger equations. We find a finite value ∌(445MeV)−2\sim (445 \rm{MeV})^{-2} for the renormalized zero-momentum propagator (taking our renormalization point at 1.943 GeV), and a pole mass ∌640±140\sim 640 \pm 140 MeV.Comment: Discussion of the renormalized gluon propagator and of the Laplacian gauge fixing procedure extended. Version to appear in Phys. Rev. D. 15 pages, 8 figure

    Photon propagator, monopoles and the thermal phase transition in 3D compact QED

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    We investigate the gauge boson propagator in three dimensional compact Abelian gauge model in the Landau gauge at finite temperature. The presence of the monopole plasma in the confinement phase leads to appearance of an anomalous dimension in the momentum dependence of the propagator. The anomalous dimension as well as an appropriate ratio of photon wave function renormalization constants with and without monopoles are observed to be order parameters for the deconfinement phase transition. We discuss the relation between our results and the confining properties of the gluon propagator in non--Abelian gauge theories.Comment: 4 pages, 5 EPS figures, RevTeX 4, uses epsfig.sty; repaced to match version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett. (discussion on fits is extended

    Infrared behavior of the gluon propagator in lattice Landau gauge: the three-dimensional case

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    We evaluate numerically the three-momentum-space gluon propagator in the lattice Landau gauge, for three-dimensional pure-SU(2) lattice gauge theory with periodic boundary conditions. Simulations are done for nine different values of the coupling ÎČ\beta, from ÎČ=0\beta = 0 (strong coupling) to ÎČ=6.0\beta = 6.0 (in the scaling region), and for lattice sizes up to V=643V = 64^3. In the limit of large lattice volume we observe, in all cases, a gluon propagator decreasing for momenta smaller than a constant value pdecp_{dec}. From our data we estimate pdec≈350p_{dec} \approx 350 MeV. The result of a gluon propagator decreasing in the infrared limit has a straightforward interpretation as resulting from the proximity of the so-called first Gribov horizon in the infrared directions.Comment: 14 pages, BI-TP 99/03 preprint, correction in the Acknowledgments section. To appear in Phys.Rev.

    Asymptotic Scaling and Infrared Behavior of the Gluon Propagator

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    The Landau gauge gluon propagator for the pure gauge theory is evaluated on a 32^3x64 lattice with a physical volume of (3.35^3x6.7)fm^4. Comparison with two smaller lattices at different lattice spacings allows an assessment of finite volume and finite lattice spacing errors. Cuts on the data are imposed to minimize these errors. Scaling of the gluon propagator is verified between beta=6.0 and beta=6.2. The tensor structure is evaluated and found to be in good agreement with the Landau gauge form, except at very small momentum values, where some small finite volume errors persist. A number of functional forms for the momentum dependence of the propagator are investigated. The form D(q^2)=D_ir+D_uv, where D_ir(q^2) ~ (q^2+M^2)^-\eta and D_uv is an infrared regulated one-loop asymptotic form, is found to provide an adequate description of the data over the entire momentum region studied - thereby bridging the gap between the infrared confinement region and the ultraviolet asymptotic region. The best estimate for the exponent \eta is 3.2(+0.1/-0.2)(+0.2/-0.3), where the first set of errors represents the uncertainty associated with varying the fitting range, while the second set of errors reflects the variation arising from different choices of infrared regulator in D_uv. Fixing the form of D_uv, we find that the mass parameter M is (1020+/-100)MeV.Comment: 37 pages, RevTeX, 16 postscript figures, 7 gif figures. Revised version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D. Model functions and discussion of asymptotic behaviour modified; all model fits have been redone. This paper, including postscript version of all figures, can be found at http://www.physics.adelaide.edu.au/~jskuller/papers

    A pilot study on the epidemiological status of Equine Infectious Anaemia, Equine Viral Arteritis, Glanders and Dourine in Turkey.

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    A serological investigation of equine infectious anaemia (EIA), equine viral arteritis (EAV), glanders, and dourine was conducted on the sera of 346 Turkish horses using a combination of tests in series (ELISA and agar gel immunodiffusion) for EIA, virus neutralisation for EAV, and complement fixation (CF) for glanders and dourine. Fortynine sera showed anticomplementary reactions and were not assessable in the CF test for glanders and dourine. No positive samples were detected for EIA, dourine, and glanders. Fifty-seven sera were positive for EAV. A systematic review of the distribution of these diseases in Turkey was conducted to describe their epidemiological status in the country. The serological results of this investigation confirm those of the published reports for EAV and glanders, whereas different results were reported for dourine and EIA. In fact, no previous data were found for dourine. Furthermore, all sera tested for EIA in the literature were negative, but 3 outbreaks were reported on an international official site in 2005 without details. Further studies and reports of the outbreaks are needed to better understand the real status of infections and the transmission of the diseases. The systematic review is a useful tool to improve the knowledge of public health disease in a country

    The Infrared Behavior of Gluon and Ghost Propagators in Landau Gauge QCD

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    A solvable systematic truncation scheme for the Dyson-Schwinger equations of Euclidean QCD in Landau gauge is presented. It implements the Slavnov-Taylor identities for the three-gluon and ghost-gluon vertices, whereas irreducible four-gluon couplings as well as the gluon-ghost and ghost-ghost scattering kernels are neglected. The infrared behavior of gluon and ghost propagators is obtained analytically: The gluon propagator vanishes for small spacelike momenta whereas the ghost propagator diverges stronger than a massless particle pole. The numerical solutions are compared with recent lattice data for these propagators. The running coupling of the renormalization scheme approaches a fixed point, αc≃9.5\alpha_c \simeq 9.5, in the infrared.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Revtex; revised version accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
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