advances in automation for experimental pathology. | the establishment of the national center for toxicological research (nctr), jefferson, ar, to study long term effects of low doses of potentially toxic substances, including carcinogens, resulted in the initiation of chronic experiments requiring histophatologic studies of large numbers of animals. processing the tissues and recording and analyzing the massive amount of pathologic data from these studies required innovative automated technics. the result was a unique computerized pathology data ... | 1976 | 775190 |
recent trends in the epidemiology of tularemia in the united states. | | 1975 | 1167886 |
epidemiologic characteristics of human tularemia in the southwest-central states, 1981-1987. | from 1981 through 1987, a total of 1,041 cases of tularemia in humans were reported in arkansas, kansas, louisiana, missouri, oklahoma, and texas; this represents 60% of the cases reported in the united states during this same time period. the state of arkansas reported the highest total (420 cases). annual incidence rates per one million population ranged from 36.3 in arkansas to less than 5.0 in kansas, louisiana, and texas. epidemiologic data were available for 1,026 cases. the majority of ca ... | 1991 | 2035503 |
serologic diagnosis of amebiasis. | | 1972 | 4334399 |
serologic, biochemical, and cultural traits of enterotoxigenic and coagulase-positive staphylococci isolated from food handlers. | | 1971 | 5001957 |
a five-year evaluation of tularemia in arkansas. | | 1983 | 6227605 |
antibody to a cdna-derived calreticulin protein from amblyomma americanum as a biomarker of tick exposure in humans. | the antibody responses of human and animal hosts were studied to determine the utility of antibody against recombinant tick calreticulin (rtc), a cdna-derived protein isolated from salivary glands of amblyomma americanum l., as a biologic marker of tick exposure. rabbits fed upon by either a. americanum or dermacentor variabilis say developed significant anti-rtc antibody responses, as measured by both elisa and immunoblot assay. in contrast, gerbils exposed to aedes aegypti did not develop anti ... | 1998 | 9715947 |
a call for renewed research on tick-borne francisella tularensis in the arkansas-missouri primary national focus of tularemia in humans. | arkansas-missouri has emerged as the primary u.s. focus of tularemia, which is caused by the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases category a priority pathogen francisella tularensis, over the past 30 yr. there are several pieces of indirect evidence suggesting that a key role of ticks in the transmission of f. tularensis to humans in arkansas-missouri is the primary reason why tularemia has remained a prominent disease of humans in this two-state area while fading away from othe ... | 2007 | 17547223 |