Disease | whooping cough |
Comorbidity | C0006017|pertussis |
Sentences | 16 |
PubMedID- 21115396 | The occasionally severe neurological complications following the human respiratory tract infection 'whooping cough' have been attributed to pertussis toxin (pt) expressed by the causative agent bordetella pertussis. |
PubMedID- 24219484 | Although there is a high uptake of vaccinations providing protection against bordetella pertussis, the main cause of whooping cough, there has been an increase in the incidence of notifications of the disease in the uk and other developed countries in recent years. |
PubMedID- 22794120 | The resurgence of pertussis (whooping cough) in australia has attracted community concern, especially with recent deaths in two infants from the australian state of new south wales (nsw) [1,2]. |
PubMedID- 24312558 | Bordetella pertussis, the causative agent of the “whooping cough”, is one such pathogen in which the t3ss is essential for its virulence and persistence in the lower respiratory tract [1], [2]. |
PubMedID- 25674816 | Bordetella pertussis, the causative agent of human whooping cough (pertussis) produces a complex array of virulence factors in order to establish efficient infection in the host. |
PubMedID- 23596573 | Diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (whooping cough) (dtp) vaccine in 1955, killed polio vaccine in 1958, and inactivated vaccine for typhoid fever in 1960 were used. |
PubMedID- 22940441 | Bordetella pertussis, the cause of whooping cough, is highly contagious. |
PubMedID- 22863321 | B. pertussis, the etiological agent of pertussis (whooping cough) is exclusively adapted to humans; b. parapertussis refers to two groups, one infects only humans and the other infects sheep [2,3]; and b. bronchiseptica establishes both asymptomatic and symptomatic infections in a broad range of mammalian hosts, which sometimes include humans [4-7]. |
PubMedID- 21524285 | In this work we focused on the pathogenic bacterium bordetella pertussis, the causative agent of whooping cough, which remains an important global health problem, with up to 300,000 annual deaths and approximately 45 million cases each year [18,19]. |
PubMedID- 22608348 | Bordetella pertussis, the causative agent of whooping cough, continues to circulate among children and adolescents even in regions with high vaccine coverage. |
PubMedID- 21695123 | Bordetella pertussis, the causative agent of whooping cough, has been shown to express a variety of virulence-associated factors that in concert enable the bacteria to colonize the mucosa of the upper respiratory tract in humans. |
PubMedID- 23027528 | Parapertussis in whooping cough cases has been increasing since the introduction of acellular pertussis vaccines containing purified antigens that are common to both strains. |
PubMedID- 22479653 | Bordetella pertussis, the etiologic agent of whooping cough, was thought to have originated recently from bordetella bronchiseptica that was infecting domestic animals such as pigs and dogs [1]–[3]. |
PubMedID- 24721229 | Infection with b holmesii is frequently misidentified as being with b pertussis, the cause of whooping cough, because routine diagnostic tests for pertussis are not species-specific. |
PubMedID- 23012649 | Interestingly, these molecules also inhibited the related cam-dependent adenylate cyclase toxin, cyaa, produced by bordetella pertussis the causative agent of whooping cough. |
PubMedID- 22852066 | Similar to ef, the adenylyl cyclase toxin cyaa secreted by bordetella pertussis, the causative agent of whooping cough, was recently shown to form ccmp, cimp and cump, too [163]. |
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