Respiratory health effects associated with restoration work in post-Hurricane Katrina New Orleans. (65/77)

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Integrated models of education and service involving community-based health care for underserved populations: Tulane student-run free clinics. (66/77)

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Unique vaginal microbiota that includes an unknown Mycoplasma-like organism is associated with Trichomonas vaginalis infection. (67/77)

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Recombination within the pandemic norovirus GII.4 lineage. (68/77)

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Neighborhood disorder and telomeres: connecting children's exposure to community level stress and cellular response. (69/77)

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Contrasting trajectories of change in primary care clinics: lessons from New Orleans safety net. (70/77)

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Trajectories of psychological distress among low-income, female survivors of Hurricane Katrina. (71/77)

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Detection of rat lungworm in intermediate, definitive, and paratenic hosts obtained from environmental sources. (72/77)

Angiostrongylus cantonensis is the most common parasite causing human eosinophilic meningitis worldwide. The geographical distribution of this disease has changed dramatically in the last few decades. Various methods have been used to detect A. cantonensis in host animals around the world. A survey of mollusks collected on the island of Hawa'i in 2005 using PCR showed an infection rate of 24-78% depending on the mollusk species. In this study, samples from intermediate, definitive, and paratenic hosts were analyzed to further determine the presence of A. cantonensis in the United States. All samples were from Hawa'i, except for the apple snails (Pomacea maculata) that were collected in New Orleans, Louisiana. Angiostrongylus cantonensis was detected in the majority of species examined, including the apple snails from New Orleans and flatworms (planarians) from Hawa'i. Among the mollusks examined, the semi-slug Parmarion martensi had the highest parasite load, with an average larval burden of 445 larvae in 25 mg of tissue, as estimated by real-time PCR. In contrast, slime excreted from these highly infected mollusks contained no or very little A. cantonensis DNA. Analysis of definitive hosts (Rattus spp.) showed discrepancies between morphological and PCR-based identification; 54% of the rats were positive based on morphology, while 100% of tissue samples from these animals were positive by real-time PCR. This indicates that necropsies of rodents could underestimate the infection rates in definitive hosts of A. cantonensis.  (+info)