968 resultados para Bacterial colonization
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The Candida genus expresses virulence factors that, when combined with immunosuppression and other risk factors, can cause different manifestations of oral candidiasis. The treatment of mucosal infections caused by Candida and the elucidation of the disease process have proven challenging. Therefore, the study of experimentally induced oral candidiasis in rats and mice is useful to clarify the etiopathology of this condition, improve diagnosis, and search for new therapeutic options because the disease process in these animals is similar to that of human candidiasis lesions. Here, we describe and discuss new studies involving rat and mouse models of oral candidiasis with respect to methods for inducing experimental infection, methods for evaluating the development of experimental candidiasis, and new treatment strategies for oral candidiasis. © 2013 Landes Bioscience.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Pós-graduação em Odontologia - FOAR
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Infective endocarditis is a process in which an infection attacks the heart endothelial surface, and is commonly caused by bacterial colonization, which is called bacterial endocarditis. It is a condition rarely found in dogs and cats, and is more prevalent in male dogs of large size. It mainly affects the left side of the heart, affecting the mitral and aortic valves with greater frequency. The circulation of the bacterium in the bloodstream is what gives rise endocarditis, and is caused by any non-aseptic process that serves as a gateway for bacterium in the body, as from a skin lesion, even as an invasive procedure, such as, catheterization and surgery. The ante-mortem diagnosis is difficult because the clinical signs of endocarditis are varied and common to other diseases, summing up the signs of infection (fever, lethargy, weight loss), and presence of heart murmur and may show signs of congestive heart failure. Thus, the diagnosis is most often through autopsy. To arrive at a diagnosis should be used, besides the history and physical examination, some laboratory tests, especially blood cultures and echocardiography. Treatment is accomplished through the use of antibiotics for long period of time, it is very important to follow the results of susceptibility after its outcome is revealed. The prognosis for bacterial endocarditis ranges from guarded to poor, and can be assessed mainly by the echocardiography. There are few studies in veterinary about the bacterial endocarditis, and the majority is case reports
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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The promotion of sugarcane growth by the endophytic Pantoea agglomerans strain 33.1 was studied under gnotobiotic and greenhouse conditions. The green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged strain P. agglomerans 33.1: pNKGFP was monitored in vitro in sugarcane plants by microscopy, reisolation, and quantitative PCR (qPCR). Using qPCR and reisolation 4 and 15 days after inoculation, we observed that GFP-tagged strains reached similar density levels both in the rhizosphere and inside the roots and aerial plant tissues. Microscopic analysis was performed at 5, 10, and 18 days after inoculation. Under greenhouse conditions, P. agglomerans 33.1-inoculated sugarcane plants presented more dry mass 30 days after inoculation. Cross-colonization was confirmed by reisolation of the GFP-tagged strain. These data demonstrate that 33.1:pNKGFP is a superior colonizer of sugarcane due to its ability to colonize a number of different plant parts. The growth promotion observed in colonized plants may be related to the ability of P. agglomerans 33.1 to synthesize indoleacetic acid and solubilize phosphate. Additionally, this strain may trigger chitinase and cellulase production by plant roots, suggesting the induction of a plant defense system. However, levels of indigenous bacterial colonization did not vary between inoculated and noninoculated sugarcane plants under greenhouse conditions, suggesting that the presence of P. agglomerans 33.1 has no effect on these communities. In this study, different techniques were used to monitor 33.1:pNKGFP during sugarcane cross-colonization, and our results suggested that this plant growth promoter could be used with other crops. The interaction between sugarcane and P. agglomerans 33.1 has important benefits that promote the plant's growth and fitness.
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Asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are two distinct lung diseases with distinctive clinical and inflammatory features. A proportion of asthmatic patients experience a fixed airflow obstruction that persists despite optimal pharmacologic treatment for reasons that are still largely unknown. We found that patients with asthma and COPD sharing a similar fixed airflow obstruction have an increased lung function decline and frequency of exacerbations. Nevertheless, the decline in lung function is associated with specific features of the underlying inflammation. Airway inflammation increases during asthma exacerbation and disease severity. Less is known about the correlations between symptoms and airway inflammation in COPD patients. We found that there is no correlation between symptoms and lung function in COPD patients. Nevertheless symptoms changes are associated with specific inflammatory changes: cough is associated with an increase of sputum neutrophils in COPD, dyspnoea is associated with an increase of eosinophils. The mechanisms of this correlation remain unknown. Neutrophils inflammation is associated with bacterial colonization in stable COPD. Is not known whether inhaled corticosteroids might facilitate bacterial colonization in COPD patients. We found that the use of inhaled corticosteroids in COPD patients is associated with an increase of airway bacterial load and with an increase of airway pathogen detection. Bacterial and viral infections are the main causes of COPD and asthma exacerbations. Impaired innate immune responses to rhinovirus infections have been described in adult patients with atopic asthma. Whether this impaired immune condition is present early in life and whether is modulated by a concomitant atopic condition is currently unknown. We found that deficient innate immune responses to rhinovirus infection are already present early in life in atopic patients without asthma and in asthmatic subjects. These findings generalize the scenario of increased susceptibility to viral infections to other Th2 oriented conditions.
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Infektiöse Komplikationen im Zusammenhang mit Implantaten stellen einen Großteil aller Krankenhausinfektionen dar und treiben die Gesundheitskosten signifikant in die Höhe. Die bakterielle Kolonisation von Implantatoberflächen zieht schwerwiegende medizinische Konsequenzen nach sich, die unter Umständen tödlich verlaufen können. Trotz umfassender Forschungsaktivitäten auf dem Gebiet der antibakteriellen Oberflächenbeschichtungen ist das Spektrum an wirksamen Substanzen aufgrund der Anpassungsfähigkeit und Ausbildung von Resistenzen verschiedener Mikroorganismen eingeschränkt. Die Erforschung und Entwicklung neuer antibakterieller Materialien ist daher von fundamentaler Bedeutung.rnIn der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden auf der Basis von Polymernanopartikeln und anorganischen/polymeren Verbundmaterialien verschiedene Systeme als Alternative zu bestehenden antibakteriellen Oberflächenbeschichtungen entwickelt. Polymerpartikel finden Anwendung in vielen verschiedenen Bereichen, da sowohl Größe als auch Zusammensetzung und Morphologie vielseitig gestaltet werden können. Mit Hilfe der Miniemulsionstechnik lassen sich u. A. funktionelle Polymernanopartikel im Größenbereich von 50-500 nm herstellen. Diese wurde im ersten System angewendet, um PEGylierte Poly(styrol)nanopartikel zu synthetisieren, deren anti-adhesives Potential in Bezug auf P. aeruginosa evaluiert wurde. Im zweiten System wurden sog. kontakt-aktive kolloide Dispersionen entwickelt, welche bakteriostatische Eigenschaften gegenüber S. aureus zeigten. In Analogie zum ersten System, wurden Poly(styrol)nanopartikel in Copolymerisation in Miniemulsion mit quaternären Ammoniumgruppen funktionalisiert. Als Costabilisator diente das zuvor quaternisierte, oberflächenaktive Monomer (2-Dimethylamino)ethylmethacrylat (qDMAEMA). Die Optimierung der antibakteriellen Eigenschaften wurde im nachfolgenden System realisiert. Hierbei wurde das oberflächenaktive Monomer qDMAEMA zu einem oberflächenaktiven Polyelektrolyt polymerisiert, welcher unter Anwendung von kombinierter Miniemulsions- und Lösemittelverdampfungstechnik, in entsprechende Polyelektrolytnanopartikel umgesetzt wurde. Infolge seiner oberflächenaktiven Eigenschaften, ließen sich aus dem Polyelektrolyt stabile Partikeldispersionen ohne Zusatz weiterer Tenside ausbilden. Die selektive Toxizität der Polyelektrolytnanopartikel gegenüber S. aureus im Unterschied zu Körperzellen, untermauert ihr vielversprechendes Potential als bakterizides, kontakt-aktives Reagenz. rnAufgrund ihrer antibakteriellen Eigenschaften wurden ZnO Nanopartikel ausgewählt und in verschiedene Freisetzungssysteme integriert. Hochdefinierte eckige ZnO Nanokristalle mit einem mittleren Durchmesser von 23 nm wurden durch thermische Zersetzung des Precursormaterials synthetisiert. Durch die nachfolgende Einkapselung in Poly(L-laktid) Latexpartikel wurden neue, antibakterielle und UV-responsive Hybridnanopartikel entwickelt. Durch die photokatalytische Aktivierung von ZnO mittels UV-Strahlung wurde der Abbau der ZnO/PLLA Hybridnanopartikel signifikant von mehreren Monaten auf mehrere Wochen verkürzt. Die Photoaktivierung von ZnO eröffnet somit die Möglichkeit einer gesteuerten Freisetzung von ZnO. Im nachfolgenden System wurden dünne Verbundfilme aus Poly(N-isopropylacrylamid)-Hydrogelschichten mit eingebetteten ZnO Nanopartikeln hergestellt, die als bakterizide Oberflächenbeschichtungen gegen E. coli zum Einsatz kamen. Mit minimalem Gehalt an ZnO zeigten die Filme eine vergleichbare antibakterielle Aktivität zu Silber-basierten Beschichtungen. Hierbei lässt sich der Gehalt an ZnO relativ einfach über die Filmdicke einstellen. Weiterhin erwiesen sich die Filme mit bakteriziden Konzentrationen an ZnO als nichtzytotoxisch gegenüber Körperzellen. Zusammenfassend wurden mehrere vielversprechende antibakterielle Prototypen entwickelt, die als potentielle Implantatbeschichtungen auf die jeweilige Anwendung weiterhin zugeschnitten und optimiert werden können.
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Healthy individuals live in peaceful co-existence with an immense load of intestinal bacteria. This symbiosis is advantageous for both the host and the bacteria. For the host it provides access to otherwise undigestible nutrients and colonization resistance against pathogens. In return the bacteria receive an excellent nutrient habitat. The mucosal immune adaptations to the presence of this commensal intestinal microflora are manifold. Although bacterial colonization has clear systemic consequences, such as maturation of the immune system, it is striking that the mutualistic adaptive (T and B cells) and innate immune responses are precisely compartmentalized to the mucosal immune system. Here we summarize the mechanisms of mucosal immune compartmentalization and its importance for a healthy host-microbiota mutualism.
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Background: The bacterial colonization of the oral mucosa was evaluated in patients with asymptomatic oral lichen planus (OLP) and compared to the microbiologic status in mucosally healthy subjects. Methods: Bacteria from patients with clinically and histopathologically diagnosed OLP from the Stomatology Service, Department of Oral Surgery and Stomatology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Bern, were collected with a non-invasive swab system. Samples were taken from OLP lesions on the gingiva and from non-affected sites on the contralateral side of the mouth. The control population did not have OLP and was recruited from the student clinic. All samples were processed with the checkerboard DNA-DNA hybridization method using well-defined bacterial species for the analysis. Results: Significantly higher bacterial counts of Bacteroides ureolyticus (P = 0.001), Dialister species (sp.) (P = 0.006), Staphylococcus haemolyticus (P = 0.007), and Streptococcus agalactiae (P = 0.006) were found in samples taken from OLP lesions compared to sites with no clinical evidence of OLP. Significantly higher bacterial counts were found for Capnocytophaga sputigena, Eikenella corrodens, Lactobacillus crispatus, Mobiluncus curtisii, Neisseria mucosa, Prevotella bivia, Prevotella intermedia, and S. agalactiae at sites with lesions in subjects with OLP compared to sites in control subjects (P <0.001). Conclusions: Microbiologic differences were found between sites with OLP and sites in subjects without a diagnosis of OLP. Specifically, higher counts of staphylococci and S. agalactiae were found in OLP lesions.
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Changes in the levels of female sex hormones during the menstrual cycle may cause cyclic differences in subgingival bacterial colonization patterns. The purpose of the present study was to test the hypothesis that hormonal changes in the menstrual cycle cause changes in the oral microbiota. METHODS: Bacterial plaque samples were collected in 20 systemically and periodontally healthy women using no hormonal contraceptives (test group) over a period of 6 weeks. Twenty age-matched systemically and periodontally healthy men were assigned to the control group. Samples were processed by checkerboard DNA-DNA hybridization assay, and 74 species were analyzed. RESULTS: No cyclic pattern of bacterial colonization was identified for any of the 74 species studied in women not using hormonal contraceptives. Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (previously Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans) (Y4) was common at the beginning of menstruation (mean: 32%) and increased during the following 2 weeks (36%) in women (P <0.05). No cyclic differences in bacterial presence were found among the men (P values varied between 0.14 and 0.98). Men presented with significantly higher bacterial counts for 40 of 74 species (P <0.001), including Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa but not Porphyromonas gingivalis (P = 0.15) or Tannerella forsythia (previously T. forsythensis) (P = 0.42). CONCLUSIONS: During a menstruation period, cyclic variation in the subgingival microbiota of periodontally healthy women of child-bearing age who were not using oral hormonal contraceptives could not be confirmed. Male control subjects presented with higher levels of many species but also without a cyclic pattern.