コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 he outcome of disease, often irrespective of bacterial burden.
2 Z B cells, preserves IgM levels, and reduces bacterial burden.
3 e death did not require a high intracellular bacterial burden.
4 sthma harbored significantly lower bronchial bacterial burden.
5 ting a direct response to Hla independent of bacterial burden.
6 sufficient wild-type mice, despite a similar bacterial burden.
7 powerful host defense mechanism that reduces bacterial burden.
8 s and Tlr7, we found an elevated respiratory bacterial burden.
9 spleens, the main subsets controlling early bacterial burden.
10 ockdown in zebrafish results in an increased bacterial burden.
11 ator, increased the number of BALF cells and bacterial burden.
12 is important for inhibiting inflammation and bacterial burden.
13 ed weight loss, and a more-rapid increase in bacterial burden.
14 s, also contribute to the elimination of the bacterial burden.
15 ible nitric oxide synthase level and a lower bacterial burden.
16 d the rate of positive results declined with bacterial burden.
17 IFN-alpha and IFN-beta resulted in a reduced bacterial burden.
18 in exacerbated lung granuloma pathology and bacterial burden.
19 increased survival, despite having a higher bacterial burden.
20 to MPYS-deficient mice decreases their liver bacterial burden.
21 of IL-1beta, IL-6, and IL-12, and increasing bacterial burden.
22 eltafakA mutant is not due to an increase in bacterial burden.
23 idered an indirect assessment of periodontal bacterial burden.
24 ant reductions observed in dermonecrosis and bacterial burden.
25 uced weight loss, systemic inflammation, and bacterial burden.
26 rea, and skin of the chest and arm to assess bacterial burden.
27 k infection, which correlated with increased bacterial burdens.
28 WT-derived macrophages exhibited comparable bacterial burdens.
29 e this phagocytic defect as well as decrease bacterial burdens.
30 nd extensive exfoliation and reduced bladder bacterial burdens.
31 MAIT cell-targeted immunotherapy to control bacterial burdens.
32 ted a significant positive relationship with bacterial burdens.
33 nociceptive neurons significantly increased bacterial burden 10 days postinfection and delayed patho
34 ged mice suffered 1000-fold higher pulmonary bacterial burden, 2.2-fold higher levels of neutrophil r
35 tential to offer infected patients with high bacterial burdens a therapeutic hope against infection w
37 ion of neutrophils in their lungs and higher bacterial burden after infection with M. tuberculosis.
39 es with the number of airway neutrophils and bacterial burden and a genetic polymorphism that increas
40 ion, huTNF KI mice survived, controlling the bacterial burden and activating bactericidal mechanisms.
42 with M. tuberculosis HN878 exhibit increased bacterial burden and are unable to control tissue-damagi
43 filtration in mouse eyes, but, increased the bacterial burden and caused more retinal tissue damage.
44 end our previous report of reduced bronchial bacterial burden and compositional complexity in subject
45 ey U test was used to compare differences in bacterial burden and cytokine responses between trauma a
46 of bacterial infections, including increased bacterial burden and decreased diversity of microbial co
47 rs of disease severity, predicting increased bacterial burden and delayed culture conversion in PTB.
48 omarkers of greater disease severity, higher bacterial burden and delayed sputum culture conversion i
51 balance necessary for granulomas to control bacterial burden and disease pathology in M. tuberculosi
52 p. was associated with a substantial loss in bacterial burden and diversity, particularly in the anae
53 tion sanroque mice demonstrated an increased bacterial burden and dysregulated inflammation in the lu
55 usions: Key features of the lung microbiome (bacterial burden and enrichment with gut-associated bact
56 esponse promotes stable control of pulmonary bacterial burden and granuloma integrity, whereas TLR2 s
58 mouse oropharynx with significantly greater bacterial burden and had significantly reduced ability t
60 ced certain proinflammatory gene expression, bacterial burden and Il-22 expression was unaffected.
61 from the probiotic Bacillus subtilis reduces bacterial burden and inflammation during S. aureus blood
62 d that simvastatin significantly reduces the bacterial burden and inflammatory cytokines in the infec
63 processing of il1beta, results in increased bacterial burden and less infiltration of macrophages to
67 culosis-infected IL-21R KO mice had enhanced bacterial burden and reduced infiltration of Ag-specific
68 hold value of 28 can be used as a measure of bacterial burden and smear status in a high HIV burden s
69 challenge, vaccinated mice exhibited reduced bacterial burden and splenomegaly, along with distinct e
70 ion was evidenced by 2-log reduction of lung bacterial burden and was accompanied by less leukocytes
71 The expression of LAG3 coincides with high bacterial burdens and changes in the host type 1 helper
72 stered nebulized bacteriophages reduced lung bacterial burdens and improved survival of methicillin-r
74 ol were sufficient to significantly increase bacterial burdens and kidney pathology in mice infected
78 with nonmucoid early CF isolates maintained bacterial burdens and mounted immune responses similar t
80 dose (50-100 CFU) that correlated with lung bacterial burdens and predicted Mtb infection outcomes a
81 chronic phase of infection and had increased bacterial burdens and severe pulmonary inflammation, wit
83 emonstrated by decreased survival, increased bacterial burden, and increased damage to their livers a
84 tion, enhanced immune cell access, decreased bacterial burden, and increased host survival, suggestin
85 t mice, assessment of lipoprotein fractions, bacterial burden, and inflammation in juvenile mice.
88 ate interactions between immune networks and bacterial burden, and to integrate these identified path
91 9; 95% CI, 1.78-9.41; P = .0011), and higher bacterial burden (aOR, 9.32; 95% CI, 6.30-13.96; P < .00
96 he ID93/GLA-SE vaccine significantly reduced bacterial burden at 16 weeks post-challenge while the BC
97 use mortality (40% versus 10%) and increased bacterial burden at 8 and 20 h postinfection compared to
99 production, decreased weight loss, and lower bacterial burdens at 24 h postbacterial infection in com
100 hly resistant to fatal disease and had lower bacterial burden, attenuated pathology, and prolonged su
101 e at day 5 postinfection was interesting, as bacterial burdens began to decline by this point, yet th
102 ody protected mice by significantly reducing bacterial burden both systemically and within reproducti
104 pigs and mice, InlP increased the placental bacterial burden by a factor of 3 log10 while having onl
106 r MyD88-dependent signaling but dependent on bacterial burden, caspase-1/11, and neutrophil-dependent
107 In a murine infection model using a high bacterial burden, ceftazidime-avibactam-fosfomycin signi
109 y and extrapulmonary pathology, and a higher bacterial burden compared with glucose-intolerant and no
110 t to M. tuberculosis infection, with reduced bacterial burdens, compared with those of healthy donors
111 straightforward associations among salivary bacterial burdens, corresponding antibody formation, and
112 By 24 h, however, Die-P mice have increased bacterial burden, despite increased neutrophil recruitme
113 y susceptible with a progressive increase in bacterial burden, despite their ability to mount an infl
114 ngly associated with a diagnosis of IPF, BAL bacterial burden (determined by 16S quantitative polymer
115 1 x 10(8) CFU/mouse) and postinfection lung bacterial burden did not appreciably impact the kinetics
116 one marrow chimeric mice exhibited increased bacterial burden, disorganized accumulation of lymphocyt
118 ls is a powerful defense mechanism to reduce bacterial burden during infection but this activity cann
119 In vivo, namH disruption did not affect the bacterial burden during infection of C57BL/6 mice or cel
120 loss and roughly 10-fold-increased systemic bacterial burden during L. monocytogenes-induced enteroc
121 reased miR-718 expression is associated with bacterial burden during Neisseria gonorrhoeae infection
126 d that GAS transmission correlated with high bacterial burdens during the acute symptomatic phase of
127 that although defective in establishing high bacterial burdens early during the infection process, T4
129 as effective as female mice at reducing the bacterial burden either with a chronic infection or when
130 C. rodentium infection resulted in a higher bacterial burden, enhanced intestinal damage, and greate
131 nfected mice showed significant reduction of bacterial burden, enhanced neutrophil recruitment, and a
133 ice challenged with Brucella display reduced bacterial burden following infection, but the underlying
134 h purified MrkA proteins also showed reduced bacterial burden following K. pneumoniae challenge.
137 day with standard therapy, translating to a bacterial burden half-life of 11.52 days vs 8.53 days, r
138 l molecules prevented efficient clearance of bacterial burden, highlighting a role for NLRP12 as a ne
139 pre-treatment infection severity (including bacterial burden, host cell activation and host cell dea
141 dx6-deficient mice exhibit no differences in bacterial burden, host immune response, or lung damage f
142 ure red blood cells correlated with elevated bacterial burdens, implying that extramedullary erythrop
143 ce development and are effective in reducing bacterial burden in a mouse model of skin MRSA infection
144 dose of imipenem (IPM) robustly lowered the bacterial burden in a neutropenic Staphylococci murine i
146 r hours later, control mice developed higher bacterial burden in blood and organs compared with mice
148 irway inflammation had a significantly lower bacterial burden in both BALF and lung tissue than did S
156 mically to infected wild-type mice decreased bacterial burden in lung and liver at 24 h postinfection
157 fferences correlated with variability in the bacterial burden in lung and spleen of mice infected wit
162 -1452-NH3 is well tolerated in vivo, reduces bacterial burden in mice and rescues mice from lethal in
165 he antibiotic induces a 3-4 log reduction in bacterial burden in mouse models of peritonitis, pneumon
167 In vivo, CD200R deficiency leads to enhanced bacterial burden in neutrophils, suggesting CD200R norma
168 rates, treatment, modified Centor score, and bacterial burden in patients with negative RADTs and pos
175 -26 decreased inflammation, lung damage, and bacterial burden in the airways by increasing macrophage
177 arance defect, with an almost 10-fold-higher bacterial burden in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid 3 h
178 bacterial control, significant reductions in bacterial burden in the draining lymph nodes, spleen, an
179 but not IL-17 or IL-23 plus IL-1beta rescued bacterial burden in the ethanol group to control levels.
180 llenge, resulting in significantly decreased bacterial burden in the FRT, accelerated Chlamydia clear
181 present in humans, functioning to reduce the bacterial burden in the gastrointestinal tract while als
183 ad greater weight loss, and showed increased bacterial burden in the kidney and peritoneal cavity fol
185 tion of Pla results in a decreased Y. pestis bacterial burden in the lung and failure to progress int
186 al lung burden, and systemic IL-22 decreases bacterial burden in the lungs and peripheral organs by p
187 yed significantly reduced inflammation, less bacterial burden in the lungs and spleens, and extended
188 ted mice also exhibited significantly higher bacterial burden in the lungs compared to the control gr
189 ticosteroids that permitted higher levels of bacterial burden in the lungs were more likely to have p
190 el, we observed a PcpA-dependent increase in bacterial burden in the lungs, blood, liver, bronchoalve
191 mice exhibit no difference in survival time, bacterial burden in the lungs, or dissemination from wil
193 nduced more-severe splenomegaly and a higher bacterial burden in the spleens of B1a cell-deficient Br
195 t strain exhibited a 4-log-unit reduction in bacterial burden in their lungs, as well as reduced lung
199 y and phagocytosis in neutrophils to control bacterial burden in tissues during CLP-induced polymicro
200 The ability of predatory bacteria to reduce bacterial burden in vivo within the lungs of rats has be
201 mine whether predatory bacteria could reduce bacterial burden in vivo, Klebsiella pneumoniae was inje
204 in MyD88 KO mice was associated with greater bacterial burdens in lungs and distal organs, and the ab
205 specific deletion of Il22ra1 also had higher bacterial burdens in lungs compared with littermate cont
206 esult was recapitulated in vivo, with higher bacterial burdens in murine tissues when infected with p
207 es a lethal or sublethal infection with high bacterial burdens in peritoneal cavity, blood and tissue
211 , IFNAR1(-/-) and wild-type mice had similar bacterial burdens in the liver and spleen following food
213 Animal survival correlated with reduced bacterial burdens in the lung (1.2 x 10(6) cfu/g of tiss
216 TLR9(-/-) mice have significantly increased bacterial burdens in the lungs, as well as decreased pro
217 R9(-/-) mice exhibit significantly increased bacterial burdens in the lungs, increased extrapulmonary
219 e colonized with sfb, as indicated by higher bacterial burdens in the lungs, lung inflammation, and m
220 f mucin with iron significantly enhanced the bacterial burdens in the peritoneal cavity and lung.
222 nfection with C. muridarum results in higher bacterial burdens in the upper genital tract at earlier
227 ls, neutrophil-depleted mice had higher lung bacterial burdens, increased incidence of bacteremia, an
228 bined B and T cell deficiency did not impact bacterial burden, indicating that B cells only enhance s
229 NLRC4-dependent regulation of intracellular bacterial burden, inflammasome assembly, pyroptosis, and
231 PcpA was strongly associated with increased bacterial burden, inflammation, and negative regulation
234 ly when the threshold density-the acceptable bacterial burden-is sufficiently high, an effect that ma
236 neumonia was associated with diminished lung bacterial burden, limited innate responses within the lu
237 e including reduced morbidity and mortality, bacterial burden, maintenance of alveolar macrophages, a
238 sessed by corneal imaging, clinical scoring, bacterial burden, neutrophil infiltration, and CXCL2 exp
240 bergenin treatment significantly reduced the bacterial burden of a multidrug-resistant TB strain.
242 se biofilm bacteria showed a 100-fold higher bacterial burden of nasal-associated lymphoid tissue in
243 that during wiping they reduced the biofilm bacterial burden of S. aureus (CFU cm(-2)) by three logs
245 Total postchallenge nasopharyngeal virulent bacterial burden of vaccinated animals was substantially
246 We found an association between increasing bacterial burden on the patient and HCP glove or gown co
247 Contusion to soft tissue had no effect on bacterial burden or cytokine response in a mouse model o
252 tion TB, suppression of IDO activity reduced bacterial burden, pathology, and clinical signs of TB di
254 to determine the effect of contusion on iGAS bacterial burden, phenotype, and host cytokine response.
255 te of infection that leads to an increase in bacterial burden post- implantation and develops patholo
258 fected with a mucoid CF isolate carried high bacterial burdens, produced significantly more interleuk
260 il numbers, had the highest correlation with bacterial burden (r > 0.6), whereas T-helper effector sy
262 ethal dose, at a lethal dose of E. coli, the bacterial burdens remained high in GRK5 KO mice relative
263 tionship was observed between the cumulative bacterial burden score of periodontal disease-related pa
265 d by an approximately three log reduction in bacterial burdens, significantly diminished clinical man
266 mast cell stabilizer, reduced BALF cells and bacterial burden similar to the levels seen in Wsh mice;
267 entified a strong, negative correlation with bacterial burden, suggesting that C. trachomatis activel
269 2) developed larger lesion sizes with higher bacterial burden than mice infected with CA-MRSA (SF8300
270 er levels of plazomicin exposure reduced the bacterial burden to <5 log10 CFU/g, allowing granulocyte
271 e therapeutic effect necessary to reduce the bacterial burden to a level below the half-saturation po
272 targeting Ly6G reverts lung inflammation and bacterial burden to levels comparable to those of WT mic
273 tative measures of culturable and cumulative bacterial burden to show that most lung lesions are prob
274 ction caused by KP35 is important to control bacterial burden, to prevent lung damage, to modulate cy
276 ring influenza infection exhibited increased bacterial burdens upon superinfection with either MRSA o
277 r microscopy, and liquid culture to quantify bacterial burden using cycle threshold values, smear gra
285 infected mice exhibited highly heterogeneous bacterial burdens, well-circumscribed granulomas that sh
291 clinically relevant concentrations; observed bacterial burdens were modeled using 3-dimensional respo
293 gene-deficient mice did not exhibit a lower bacterial burden when compared with wild-type mice, alth
296 nts precede vaccine-induced reduction of the bacterial burden, which occurs only after the colocaliza
297 odentium, Tpl2(-/-) mice experienced greater bacterial burdens with evidence of dissemination to the
298 with IPF have altered lung microbiota, with bacterial burden within the lungs associated with mortal
300 ns host tissues to become tolerant to a high bacterial burden, without compromising host fitness.