| use of bacitracin in the prevention and treatment of experimentally-induced idiopathic colitis in horses. | ten healthy ponies from a single herd were found by repeated fecal culture to be free of salmonella species and clostridium cadaveris. in a preliminary study, four ponies administered a single oral dose of 10 mg/kg lincomycin did not develop idiopathic colitis when the drug was administered alone. four other ponies were administered 10 mg/kg lincomycin by stomach tube together with 0.45 l of colonic content from a horse with idiopathic colitis induced earlier by lincomycin alone. two of the four ... | 1992 | 1423060 |
| lincomycin-induced severe colitis in ponies: association with clostridium cadaveris. | four groups of two ponies, free of fecal salmonella and clostridium cadaveris, were treated as follows: group a, control group; b, single nasogastrically administered dose of lincomycin (25 mg/kg) followed 48 h later by 3 l of c. cadaveris (10(9) organisms/ml); c, the same dose of lincomycin as group b; d, the same dose of c. cadaveris as group b on each of three occasions at 12 h intervals. groups a and d remained healthy, but groups b and c developed severe colitis 48-56 h (b) or 72 h (c) afte ... | 1992 | 1591660 |
| clostridium cadaveris: an unusual cause of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. | bacterial peritonitis has been known to complicate severe liver disease. aerobic organisms are responsible for the vast majority of cases, whereas anaerobic bacteria are responsible for less than 5% of all cases reported in the literature. we now report a case of clostridium cadaveris anaerobic bacterial peritonitis in a 58-yr-old female, an organism that to our knowledge has not been previously implicated as an infectious agent in this entity. | 1992 | 1728112 |
| [meningitis caused by clostridium cadaveris]. | | 1991 | 1762467 |
| a method for reproducing fatal idiopathic colitis (colitis x) in ponies and isolation of a clostridium as a possible agent. | severe colitis was induced in two ponies after oral pretreatment with clindamycin and lincomycin, followed by intestinal content from two horses which had died from naturally-occurring idiopathic colitis. two ponies treated with antibiotic alone, and two ponies treated with intestinal content alone, were unaffected. in a further study, three ponies treated on separate occasions with lincomycin, administered orally, died or were destroyed 67 to 72 h after initial treatment. no established salmone ... | 1988 | 3215166 |
| comparison of schaedler agar and trypticase soy-yeast extract agar for the cultivation of anaerobic bacteria. | schaedler agar (sa) and trypticase soy-yeast extract agar (tsyea), both supplemented with rabbit blood (5%, v/v) and menadione (0.5 mg/liter), were compared with respect to quantitative recovery, quality of growth, and rapidity of growth of selected anaerobic bacteria. the media were stored for 2 to 4 days prior to use in an anaerobic glove box, where all subsequent bacteriological procedures were performed. after 24 hr of incubation, colonies of clostridium cadaveris (c. capitovale), c. haemoly ... | 1971 | 4943275 |
| clostridium cadaveris bacteremia in the immunocompromised host. | clostridium cadaveris, usually considered a non-pathogen, was isolated from blood cultures of two febrile patients with cancer. the bacteremias appeared to have originated from the abdomen. this organism has not been previously reported as the etiological agent in this setting. | 1993 | 8426578 |
| pleural empyema due to clostridium difficile and clostridium cadaveris. | | 1997 | 9243057 |
| clostridium cadaveris bacteremia in an immunocompetent host. | | 1999 | 10525006 |
| clostridium cadaveris bacteraemia: two cases and review. | clostridium cadaveris is a strict anaerobic gram-positive rod that is the most prominent bacterium during the decay of dead bodies. we present 2 rare cases of bacteraemia with c. cadaveris. the source of both infectious episodes was most probably of gastrointestinal origin. | 2006 | 16338840 |
| clostridium cadaveris septic arthritis after total hip arthroplasty in a metastatic breast cancer patient. | we report the first known case of septic arthritis in the setting of total hip arthroplasty caused by clostridium cadaveris, a gas-forming anaerobic enteric organism usually considered a non-pathogen. this case occurred in a patient treated with total hip arthroplasty for metastatic breast cancer involving the acetabulum. the patient was managed successfully with debridement, prosthetic retention, and chronic antibiotic suppression. we propose this mode of care as a successful alternative for so ... | 2007 | 17275650 |
| detection of pathogenic clostridia in biogas plant wastes. | as the number of biogas plants has grown rapidly in the last decade, the amount of potentially contaminated wastes with pathogenic clostridium spp. has increased as well. this study reports the results from examining 203 biogas plant wastes (bgws). the following clostridium spp. with different frequencies could be isolated via a new enrichment medium (krüne medium) and detected by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (maldi-tof ms): clostridium perfringens ... | 2015 | 24984829 |
| identification and characterization of a 20β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase from the anaerobic gut bacterium butyricicoccus desmolans atcc 43058. | members of the gastrointestinal microbiota are known to convert glucocorticoids to androstanes, which can be subsequently converted to potent androgens by other members of the gut microbiota or host tissues. butyricicoccus desmolans and clostridium cadaveris has previously been reported for steroid-17,20-desmolase and 20β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (20β-hsdh) activities that were responsible for androstane formation from cortisol, however the gene encoding these enzymes has yet to be reported. ... | 2017 | 28314858 |
| isolation of six novel 7-oxo- or urso-type secondary bile acid-producing bacteria from rat cecal contents. | understanding the dynamics of secondary bile acid (sba) formation in the gut by sba-producing bacteria is important for host health, as sbas have been shown to affect host pathophysiology and gut microbiota composition. however, our knowledge of sba producers is limited in light of the diversity of gut microbes. here, we isolated six novel sba-producing bacteria from rat cecal contents, all of which were members of known species of gut microbes. anaerostipes caccae d10, bacteroides nordii c5, cl ... | 2017 | 28751127 |
| preterm infant-associated clostridium tertium, clostridium cadaveris, and clostridium paraputrificum strains: genomic and evolutionary insights. | clostridium species (particularly clostridium difficile, clostridium botulinum, clostridium tetani and clostridium perfringens) are associated with a range of human and animal diseases. several other species including clostridium tertium, clostridium cadaveris, and clostridium paraputrificum have also been linked with sporadic human infections, however there is very limited, or in some cases, no genomic information publicly available. thus, we isolated one c. tertium strain, one c. cadaveris str ... | 2017 | 29044436 |