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1 ntestine, where bradyzoites must enter after oral infection.
2 trol the parasite and succumb within 2 wk of oral infection.
3 obial and antibody responses associated with oral infection.
4 vation, resulting in reduced defense against oral infection.
5 important for efficient T cell responses to oral infection.
6 ia within the liver and spleen of mice after oral infection.
7 differentiation of gut mucosal T cells after oral infection.
8 infection can be recapitulated following an oral infection.
9 toneal dose of CDDO at the time of T. gondii oral infection.
10 e expression due to Porphyromonas gingivalis oral infection.
11 compared with CX3CR1(gfp/gfp) mice following oral infection.
12 compared to noninfected controls, following oral infection.
13 ing and/or contributing to susceptibility to oral infection.
14 n the Peyer's patches as early as 3 hr after oral infection.
15 al colon of the gastrointestinal tract after oral infection.
16 y the gut mucosal immune responses following oral infection.
17 itionally regarded as a chronic inflammatory oral infection.
18 ors of bone loss consequent to P. gingivalis oral infection.
19 uantitative study of the fate of prions upon oral infection.
20 were conducted with insect larvae by use of oral infection.
21 th maximal migration occurring 48-54 h after oral infection.
22 pathogenic infection in its vector following oral infection.
23 ive further blood meals after their original oral infection.
24 s was present in saliva within two days post-oral infection.
25 nly encountered first during childhood as an oral infection.
26 ues and the spleen after an otherwise lethal oral infection.
27 enes replication foci only after a secondary oral infection.
28 egy to control alveolar bone loss induced by oral infection.
29 ntal disease-induced oxidative stress during oral infection.
30 lly favor CC17 GBS meningitis following mice oral infection.
31 re numerically stable for >1 y after initial oral infection.
32 protection against lethal Y. enterocolitica oral infection.
33 mouse macrophages and during S. typhimurium oral infection.
34 olonized the intestine and deeper tissues in oral infection.
35 g passage through the host stomach following oral infection.
36 al of B. microti in a murine model following oral infection.
37 n an NRAMP(R), C3H/HeN murine model of acute oral infection.
38 O resulting from the host immune response to oral infection.
39 parasite that is usually transmitted through oral infection.
40 wing, severe and progressive tooth decay, or oral infections.
41 The deceased had fewer teeth and more oral infections.
42 and hypofunction which causes xerostomia and oral infections.
43 reptococci and may be implicated in some non-oral infections.
44 sed in metainflammation are also reported in oral infections.
45 lymphoid organ that orchestrates immunity to oral infections.
46 ry T cell responses during both systemic and oral infections.
47 ed from extraoral infections as well as from oral infections.
48 erentially expressed in vaginal, rather than oral, infections.
49 terial challenge not only is associated with oral infection among children but also predicts increase
50 ervational Study, evaluated the influence of oral infection and age on the associations between osteo
51 rong rationale for studying the link between oral infection and AMD pathogenesis in individuals with
53 showed reduced lethality in a mouse model of oral infection and persisted in significantly lower numb
56 and potentially causal associations between oral infections and cardiometabolic diseases (CMDs), con
57 rticles as a multifaceted agent for treating oral infections and improving dental materials, especial
59 Akita/Ncf1 mice had increased prevalence of oral infections and more severe periodontitis compared w
61 oke or myocardial infarction enrolled in the Oral Infections and Vascular Disease Epidemiology Study
62 er-specific IgM and IgG antibodies following oral infection, and had significantly attenuated Citroba
63 and ROP16 promoted host resistance to acute oral infection, and Toxoplasma may possibly target the S
64 al route, and thus suitable animal models of oral infection are needed to investigate viral pathogene
65 al route, and thus suitable animal models of oral infection are needed to investigate viral pathogene
70 barrier." Wild-type flies are refractory to oral infection by arboviruses, including Sindbis virus a
73 nflammasome does not result in resistance to oral infection by S. typhimurium, but rather, leads to i
76 larvae also exhibit enhanced sensitivity to oral infection by the bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas ent
77 exhibited complete protection against lethal oral infections by Yersinia enterocolitica WA and Y. pse
78 efore, future studies must elucidate whether oral infections can increase the risk of CMDs independen
82 s from the murine spleen and liver following oral infection compared to organisms grown under normal
83 zation and immune cell populations following oral infection confirmed characteristics previously desc
87 ally distinct from Trm cells generated after oral infection, demonstrating the critical contribution
88 have been proposed, including spread of the oral infection due to transient bacteremia resulting in
89 ferred significant protection against lethal oral infection, equivalent to that conferred by whole he
92 The "one pathogen, one disease" paradigm of oral infections has been replaced by a holistic concept
94 ese findings further support the notion that oral infections have extraoral effects and document that
96 te to the central nervous system (CNS) after oral infection in C57BL/6J mice expressing either wild-t
97 haryngeal candidiasis (OPC), the most common oral infection in human immunodeficiency virus-positive
100 peutic implications in the treatment of this oral infection in the severely immunocompromised host.
101 infection that enables the natural route of oral infection in weaned and nonimmunocompromised 21-day
105 he function of this signaling pathway during oral infection, in which mucosal immunity assumes a pred
107 coccus micros in the pathogenesis of various oral infections, including oropharyngeal abscesses and p
108 plication of nanoparticles in the control of oral infections, including their use in photodynamic the
111 though their specific causal relationship to oral infection-induced chronic inflammatory diseases is
113 the three mouse strains tested suggests that oral infection is a useful model for studying the host r
114 hermore, induction of T(H)17 immunity during oral infection is dependent on TLR1 and results from the
115 participants developing enteric fever after oral infection, marked transcriptional and cytokine resp
117 arcZ double mutant has phenotypes in a mouse oral infection model consistent with increased expressio
118 dies also reinforce the utility of the mouse oral infection model in dissecting the pathobiology of p
119 ack individual species within a dual-species oral infection model in mice with both temporal and spat
120 xpression was upregulated in a P. gingivalis oral infection model, and reduced IFN-gamma and IL-17 we
123 suggesting that PPs are required neither for oral infection nor for CpG-induced resistance against or
130 yphimurium is attenuated for virulence after oral infection of immunocompromised gp91phox(-/-) mice t
131 nd PIF2 (Ac022), like P74, are essential for oral infection of lepidopteran larval hosts of Autograph
134 s of these observations were revealed during oral infection of mice with S. typhimurium, wherein endo
135 urine Salmonella infection, wherein low-dose oral infection of mice with Salmonella enterica subsp. e
137 type 2 mucosal immune response that follows oral infection of mice with the nematode parasite, Helig
138 patches, the liver, and the spleen following oral infection of mice with WT, dam mutant, or flagellin
139 ere recovered from the liver or spleen after oral infection of mice, ADAR, PKR, Mx, and CIITA express
140 We examined the role of this deletion in oral infection of mosquitoes by constructing infectious
146 stomatitis (DS) is a persistent and chronic oral infection of the denture-bearing palatal mucosa.
147 , SPI2 mutant ST are highly attenuated after oral infection of the same mice, revealing a role for SP
149 y, we examined the effect of EHDV serotype-2 oral infection on the survival and reproduction of Culic
151 train II+ROP16I) promotes host resistance to oral infection only in the context of endogenous GRA15 e
152 understanding immunity to T. cruzi following oral infection or oral vaccination, knowing that the rou
153 Furthermore, animals with DIO exposed to oral infection or systemic inoculation of live P. gingiv
154 ealthy subjects or persons who had syphilis, oral infections, or rheumatoid arthritis were tested by
155 ons who had syphilis, periodontitis or other oral infections, or rheumatoid arthritis were tested wit
156 erns may help explain the immunopathology of oral infections, particularly with regard to inflammator
157 emic inflammatory state elicited by a common oral infection (periodontitis) could enhance treatment r
158 Using Yersinia enterocolitica, we show that oral infection promotes T(H)17 immunity, whereas systemi
160 specific animal husbandry techniques and an oral infection route showed cftr(-/-) mice but not WT mi
164 Biofilm-induced inflammatory osteolytic oral infections, such as periodontitis and peri-implanti
165 one loss than did immunocompetent mice after oral infection, suggesting that lymphocytes contribute t
175 ss, in general, but neither bone density nor oral infection was significantly associated with mean al
176 ral mucosal constructs, and a mouse model of oral infection, we demonstrated that S. oralis augmented
178 ased susceptibility to bone resorption after oral infection, while a hypomorphic defect in beta(2)-in
179 trate that morphine withdrawal sensitizes to oral infection with a bacterial pathogen and predisposes
180 e, and WT C57BL/6 mice all survived an acute oral infection with a low dose of mildly virulent strain
183 ion (odds ratio, 14.6; 95% CI, 6.3 to 36.6), oral infection with any of 37 types of HPV (odds ratio,
191 signs of the hemolytic uremic syndrome after oral infection with Escherichia coli O157:H7 or other Sh
192 g-treated mice, tooth extraction followed by oral infection with Fusobacterium nucleatum caused BONJ-
193 show that rhesus macaques are susceptible to oral infection with human noroviruses from two different
198 o intestinal epithelium-derived OVA, because oral infection with Listeria monocytogenes-encoding OVA
199 Maternal periodontal disease is a chronic oral infection with local and systemic inflammatory resp
202 st cells to local bone destruction following oral infection with P. gingivalis Mast cell-deficient mi
203 re resistant to alveolar bone loss following oral infection with P. gingivalis, and thus establish a
207 d that antibiotic treatment of mice prior to oral infection with poliovirus reduced viral replication
208 thritis, concomitant periodontitis caused by oral infection with Porphyromonas gingivalis enhances ar
209 el in which alveolar bone loss is induced by oral infection with Porphyromonas gingivalis, a gram-neg
215 hine withdrawal on spontaneous sepsis and on oral infection with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimur
216 and proinflammatory cytokines in response to oral infection with Salmonella in newly hatched chickens
217 y hatched chickens 6, 12, 24, and 48 h after oral infection with Salmonella serovar Typhimurium.
220 icient mice, which are already sensitized to oral infection with Shigella flexneri, leads to further
221 LB/c) that fail to develop ileitis following oral infection with T. gondii were rendered susceptible
225 ne response in alveolar bone loss induced by oral infection with the human gram-negative anaerobic ba
226 ited in certain strains of inbred mice after oral infection with the intracellular protozoan parasite
228 avirulent and protective against subsequent oral infection with the virulent serovar Typhimurium SR-
229 anemic and exhibit delayed growth following oral infection with third-stage Ancylostoma ceylanicum h
236 et within the iIEL population in response to oral infection with virulent or avirulent Salmonella.
237 his study examined the effect of morphine on oral infection with virulent Salmonella typhimurium.
242 Moreover, Cnlp+/+ mice were protected from oral infections with C. rodentium inocula that infected
243 s or with all three species in polymicrobial oral infections with or without Fusobacterium nucleatum.
244 treatment, HAART) suffer significantly fewer oral infections with the opportunistic fungal pathogen C