A new Legionella species, Legionella feeleii species nova, causes Pontiac fever in an automobile plant.
暂无分享,去创建一个
L A Herwaldt | C. W. Moss | A. Steigerwalt | A. Hightower | C. Broome | A. Reingold | D. J. Brenner | L. Herwaldt | A W Hightower | G. Gorman | B. Brake | H. Wilkinson | P. Boxer | G W Gorman | T McGrath | S Toma | B Brake | J Jones | A L Reingold | P A Boxer | P W Tang | J. Jones | S. Toma | T. McGrath | P. W. Tang | Peter A. Boxer | B. J. Brake | Teresa McGRATH
[1] C. W. Moss,et al. Cellular fatty acid composition of isolates from Legionnaires disease , 1977, Journal of clinical microbiology.
[2] C. W. Moss,et al. Cellular Fatty Acid Composition of Legionella longbeachae sp. nov , 1981, Journal of clinical microbiology.
[3] L. Mcdougal,et al. Legionella oakridgensis: unusual new species isolated from cooling tower water , 1983, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[4] C. W. Moss,et al. Legionella wadsworthii species nova: a cause of human pneumonia. , 1982, Annals of internal medicine.
[5] P. Brachman,et al. Legionnaires' disease. , 1977, Disease-a-month : DM.
[6] W. Baine,et al. Sporadic community-acquired Legionnaires' disease in the United States. A case-control study. , 1979, Annals of internal medicine.
[7] A. Steigerwalt,et al. Legionella longbeachae species nova, another etiologic agent of human pneumonia. , 1981, Annals of internal medicine.
[8] C. W. Moss,et al. Further studies of the cellular fatty acid composition of Legionnaires disease bacteria , 1979, Journal of clinical microbiology.
[9] J. Feeley,et al. Pontiac fever: isolation of the etiologic agent (Legionella pneumophilia) and demonstration of its mode of transmission. , 1981, American journal of epidemiology.
[10] B. Plikaytis,et al. Sporadic legionellosis in the United States: the first thousand cases. , 1981, Annals of internal medicine.
[11] S. Thacker,et al. The Vermont epidemic of Legionnaires' disease. , 1979, Annals of Internal Medicine.
[12] C. E. Haley,et al. Nosocomial Legionnaires' disease: a continuing common-source epidemic at Wadsworth Medical Center. , 1979, Annals of internal medicine.
[13] C. W. Moss. Gas-liquid chromatography as an analytical tool in microbiology. , 1981, Journal of chromatography.
[14] D. Deubner,et al. Nonpneumonic, short-incubation-period Legionellosis (Pontiac fever) in men who cleaned a steam turbine condenser. , 1979, Science.
[15] R. J. Gibson,et al. Charcoal-yeast extract agar: primary isolation medium for Legionella pneumophila , 1979, Journal of clinical microbiology.
[16] R. J. Gibson,et al. Pittsburgh pneumonia agent: direct isolation from human lung tissue. , 1980, The Journal of infectious diseases.
[17] H. Wilkinson,et al. Indirect immunofluorescence test for serodiagnosis of Legionnaires disease: evidence for serogroup diversity of Legionnaires disease bacterial antigens and for multiple specificity of human antibodies , 1979, Journal of clinical microbiology.
[18] J. Wells,et al. Isolation of Legionella spp. from environmental water samples by low-pH treatment and use of a selective medium , 1981, Journal of clinical microbiology.
[19] J. Davis,et al. Epidemic Legionnaires' disease. Airborne transmission down a chimney. , 1981, JAMA.
[20] W. W. Rhodes,et al. Pontiac fever. An epidemic of unknown etiology in a health department: I. Clinical and epidemiologic aspects. , 1978, American journal of epidemiology.
[21] A. Steigerwalt,et al. Classification of the Legionnaires' disease bacterium: Legionella pneumophila, genus novum, species nova, of the family Legionellaceae, familia nova. , 1979, Annals of internal medicine.
[22] C. W. Moss,et al. The rickettsia-like organisms TATLOCK (1943) and HEBA (1959): bacteria phenotypically similar to but genetically distinct from Legionella pneumophila and the WIGA bacterium. , 1980, Annals of internal medicine.
[23] D. J. Dodd,et al. Characteristics of environmental isolates of Legionella pneumophila , 1981, Applied and environmental microbiology.