A Japanese man suffered from acute respiratory tract infection after returning to Japan from Bali, Indonesia in 2007. Miyazaki-Bali/2007, a strain of the species of Nelson Bay orthoreovirus, was isolated from the patient's throat swab using Vero cells, in which syncytium formation was observed. This is the sixth report describing a patient with respiratory tract infection caused by an orthoreovirus classified to the species of Nelson Bay orthoreovirus. Given the possibility that all of the patients were infected in Malaysia and Indonesia, prospective surveillance on orthoreovirus infections should be carried out in Southeast Asia. Furthermore, contact surveillance study suggests that the risk of human-to-human infection of the species of Nelson Bay orthoreovirus would seem to be low.
We describe the epidemiology of a pertussis outbreak in Japan in 2010–2011 and Bordetella holmesii transmission. Six patients were infected; 4 patients were students and a teacher at the same junior high school. Epidemiologic links were found between 5 patients. B. holmesii may have been transmitted from person to person.
The effect of oral administration of bacteriolytic enzymes and enzymatically digested bacterial cell walls on immunostimulation in guinea pigs was studied. Guinea pigs were given lysozyme or pronase or both orally for a period of 8 days, and on day 7 they were primed with hepatitis B surface antigen. Circulating antibody titers to the antigen in the enzyme-treated group were significantly higher (four to six times, P < 0.05) than those in nontreated control groups on day 16 after immunization. Stimulation of cellular immunity in the group receiving both lysozyme and pronase simultaneously was significantly increased compared with the group receiving only one of them. The humoral immune response was enhanced by oral administration of enzymatically digested cell walls isolated from Bifidobacterium longum. The result suggested that intestinal bacteria might be solubilized by oral administration of bacteriolytic enzymes and that the absorbable fragment of peptidoglycan released from the bacterial cell walls might be responsible for the enhanced host immune responses.
SUMMARYTo assess the effects of pacing-induced left bundle branch block on left ventricular (LV) systolic and diastolic performance, we performed digital subtraction ventriculography while simultaneously measuring LV pressure with a catheter tip micromanometer. The subjects included 10 patients with a sinus rhythm, a normal QRS duration and PR interval within 0.22sec. LV performance was assessed during both right atrial pacing (AP) and atrioventricular sequential pacing (AVP) at the same pacing rate. The atrioventricular pacing interval during AVP was adjusted to be the maximal interval that showed the QRS configuration seen during complete right ventricular pacing. LV end-diastolic pressure and volume during AVP did not differ from those during AP. Peak positive and negative dp/dt during AVP were significantly lower than those during AP. Time constants were also significantly longer during AVP. The QRS duration during AVP significantly correlated with endsystolic volume and time constants, and inversely correlated with ejection fraction and +dp/dt. These observations indicated that conduction disturbance per se, induced by AVP, could not only impair LV systolic performance but also diastolic performance, possibly due to asynchronous contraction and relaxation of the left ventricle.
Oral administration of "immune milk", that had been obtained from cows immunized with a variety of human gut bacteria containing E. coli, S. typhimurium, S. dysenteriae and 23 others, protected AKR/J mice from the lethal effect of radiation, when immune milk was orally given to mice at 150 g kg-1 day-1 for 7 days prior to gamma-irradiation of 8 Gy. Mean survival times were 24.8 days for the group given immune milk but only 16.8 days for the group given control milk from unimmunized cows. Enterobacteriaceae were detected in various organs such as liver, lung and kidney on day 13 after irradiation, whereas the numbers were significantly fewer in the study group as compared with the control group. And fewer number of intestinal Enterobacteriaceae were detected in the study group compared with the control group prior to irradiation. Immune milk also enhanced the mitogenic response to mesenteric lymph node cells, the redirected cytolytic activity of intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes to P815 tumor cells with anti-CD3 mAb, and in vitro killing activities of the phagocytes in mesenteric lymph nodes to E. coli as compared with control milk. These results suggest that immune milk may reduce the number of bacteria translocating from the intestinal-tract and augment the activities of the gut-associated lymphoid tissues against the invasion of intestinal bacteria, causing protection against the lethal effect of radiation.
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