The Journal of infectious diseases
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Forty-four heart and five heart-lung transplant recipients with cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection were investigated for risk factors associated with symptomatic CMV infection (17 patients) and CMV pneumonia (eight patients). Symptomatic infection was associated with primary rather than reactivated infection (P less than .005), younger age (P less than .005), heart-lung transplantation (P less than .001), and significant rises in titer of antibody to the early antigen of Epstein-Barr virus (P less than .001). ⋯ CMV viremia was found in all patients with symptomatic infection, including the eight patients with CMV pneumonia, and the frequency of positive buffy coat cultures for CMV was significantly higher in patients with symptoms than in patients without symptoms (P less than .001). Neither symptomatic CMV infection nor CMV pneumonia was significantly associated with the use of antithymocyte globulin, restricted to therapy for rejection, and the use of high doses of acyclovir in 11 patients had no demonstrable impact on CMV culture positivity.
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The FRhL-2 cell line, a diploid line derived from the lung of a fetal rhesus monkey, was used to prepare a potent rabies vaccine by adapting the Kissling strain of rabies virus to FRhL-2 cells, growing the virus in quantity, inactivating the virus with beta-propiolactone, and concentrating the virus by adsorption to aluminum phosphate. High levels of antibody to rabies virus, induced by the vaccine in both guinea pigs and humans at 14 days after immunization, were determined to be IgG. Data from postexposure protocols with guinea pigs and simulated postexposure protocols in humans showed protection and antibody response even when rabies immune globulin was administered at the time of vaccination.
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We measured levels of antibodies to Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) in serum and in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens obtained from 32 patients with acute encephalitis by using "antibody-capture" solid-phase enzyme-linked immunoassays specific for IgM or IgG to JEV. The proportions of confirmed cases with IgM to JEV detectable in CSF were 68% (obtained on day 1), 100% (day 7), 96% (day 30), and 72% (day 180). ⋯ Twenty-five CSF samples were obtained from control patients with other diseases with possible nervous system involvement (but none with a clinical diagnosis of viral encephalitis); none had detectable IgM to JEV. Five JEV-infected but asymptomatic siblings of patients with encephalitis were also examined; all had high levels of IgM to JEV in serum, but none had detectable IgM to JEV in CSF.
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During a 21-month period Acinetobacter calcoaceticus was the most common organism causing infections in a university burn center. Forty-three of 103 patients admitted became infected with this organism. Risk factors associated with burn wound colonization with Acinetobacter included larger burns and Foley catheter use; however, only a longer duration of hospitalization was an independent discriminator of colonization. ⋯ An investigation found that wet mattresses served as environmental reservoirs of Acinetobacter. This finding led to a policy of discarding each patient's mattress on the day of the patient's discharge from the burn unit. Life table analysis demonstrated that this intervention led to a reduced risk of burn wound colonization with Acinetobacter (P less than .05) and ultimately resulted in the complete elimination of the organism from the burn unit.