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1  beaded forms of Mycobacterium gordonae from M. kansasii.
2 s and 83, 95, 59, and 98%, respectively, for M. kansasii.
3 es from three of the patients again revealed M. kansasii.
4 ns was greater than smooth "M. canettii" and M. kansasii.
5 , 9 M. avium, 3 M. intracellulare complex, 3 M. kansasii, 4 M. gordonae, and 5 M. chelonae group (all
6  64.35 degrees C (63.27 to 65.42 degrees C); M. kansasii, 59.20 degrees C (58.07 to 60.33 degrees C);
7 terium avium-intracellulare complex (83.2%), M. kansasii (7.7%), and M. abscessus (3.4%).
8 s level, with the exception of one strain of M. kansasii (accurately identified but with a low spectr
9 ubspecies I is the predominant subspecies of M. kansasii among clinical isolates in the United States
10         One patient's culture contained both M. kansasii and M. avium, but none of the initial or fol
11                                              M. kansasii and M. smegmatis also grew very poorly in ac
12 ich rarely occur, are genetically related to M. kansasii and morphologically difficult to distinguish
13                         All five isolates of M. kansasii and three of three isolates of M. simiae yie
14  growing mycobacteria, 100% of patients with M. kansasii, and 0% of patients with M. gordonae.
15  (98% were M. abscessus), 78% (29 of 37) for M. kansasii, and 26% (9 of 35) for M. gordonae.
16 y growing NTM, including 7/7 M. marinum, 7/7 M. kansasii, and 7/11 of other less commonly isolated sp
17 o mycobacterial species, M. scrofulaceum and M. kansasii, and eight of the environmental mycobacteria
18 tle with little to no seroreactivity against M. kansasii- and M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-infect
19 luding three of these patients' isolates and M. kansasii ATCC 12478), and cultures of several other s
20                                           An M. kansasii, DeltaMKAN27435 partially lipooligosaccharid
21       On macrophage depletion, we identified M. kansasii forms extracellular cords, resulting in acut
22 ssay also distinguished the ESAT-6-secreting M. kansasii from the non-ESAT-6-secreting M. simiae.
23 63 of 76 (83%) of the specimens positive for M. kansasii, giving sensitivities specificities, positiv
24                Persons infected with HIV and M. kansasii have a higher rate of hospitalization and a
25                             Five cultures of M. kansasii (including three of these patients' isolates
26 acterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guerin, and M. kansasii) induced significantly more AMphi apoptosis
27                    To date, our knowledge of M. kansasii infection has been hampered owing to the lac
28 HIV-positive persons, but most patients with M. kansasii infection have clinical and radiologic evide
29 he epidemiology and clinical implications of M. kansasii infection in the AIDS era.
30 d that the zebrafish embryo is permissive to M. kansasii infection, resulting in chronic infection an
31              The fact that a single clone of M. kansasii is responsible for most cases of human disea
32     One M. fortuitum isolate and one of five M. kansasii isolates were recovered only by the BACTEC 4
33 MTD results can occur due to the presence of M. kansasii, M. avium, and possibly other Mycobacterium
34 terial species: M. avium, M. intracellulare, M. kansasii, M. chelonae group, M. gordonae, M. xenopi,
35 nce of clinically relevant slow growers like M. kansasii, M. szulgai, M. gordonae, and M. asiaticum;
36 l mycobacteria, related to "M. canettii" and M. kansasii, modern M. tuberculosis probably became more
37 ed with pyrazinamide to include M. avium and M. kansasii, organisms usually not susceptible to pyrazi
38 ht the feasibility of zebrafish for studying M. kansasii pathogenesis and for the first time identify
39 , four of seven patients with culture-proven M. kansasii pulmonary infections yielded one or more fal
40 mptive identification of M. tuberculosis and M. kansasii, respectively, and as guides for initial pro
41 in of M. bovis Bacillus Calmette-Guerin; and M. kansasii to demonstrate detection times greater those
42 f participants had pulmonary NTM disease and M. kansasii with a prevalence of 69.2% [95% CI: 63.2-74.
43  patients' sputum cultures yielded growth of M. kansasii within 6 to 12 days, and the fifth produced