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Featured researches published by Anne C. Moore.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1992

Neurocysticercosis in an Orthodox Jewish community in New York City.

Peter M. Schantz; Anne C. Moore; Jose Munoz; Barry J. Hartman; John A. Schaefer; Alan M. Aron; Deborah Persaud; Elsa Sarti; Marianna Wilson; Ana Flisser

BACKGROUND AND METHODS From June 1990 through July 1991, intracerebral infection with the larval stage of the pork tapeworm Taenia solium was diagnosed in four unrelated persons in an Orthodox Jewish community in New York City. None of the patients had eaten pork, and only one had traveled to a country in which T. solium infection was endemic. We investigated this outbreak, screened serum samples from family members and household contacts for antibodies to cysticercosis, and examined stool specimens from household employees for eggs of taenia species. RESULTS The four patients had recurrent seizures and brain lesions that were radiologically consistent with the presence of cysticerci. The diagnosis was confirmed in two patients by a brain biopsy, and in two by immunoblot assays for cysticercus antibodies. Of 17 immediate family members screened serologically, 7 from two families had cysticercus antibodies. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain showed cystic lesions in two of the seropositive family members, one of whom had had a seizure. Examinations of six domestic employees from all four households revealed an active infection with taenia species in one and a positive serologic test in another. Since these women had recently emigrated from Latin American countries where T. solium infection is endemic, they were the most likely sources of infection in the members of these households. CONCLUSIONS A diagnosis of neurocysticercosis should be considered in patients with seizures and radiologic evidence of cystic brain lesions, even in those who do not eat pork and who have not traveled to a country in which T. solium infection is endemic. Recent emigrants from countries in which T. solium infection is endemic should be screened for tapeworm infection in their stools before they are employed as housekeepers or food handlers.


The Lancet | 2001

Estimated risk of HIV transmission by blood transfusion in Kenya

Anne C. Moore; Guillermo A. Herrera; Jack Nyamongo; Eve M. Lackritz; Tim Granade; Bernard L. Nahlen; Aggrey J. Oloo; George Opondo; Richard Muga; Robert S. Janssen

BACKGROUND During the past decade, developing countries have received limited support for blood safety programmes. The Kenya Ministry of Health did a collaborative multicentre assessment to establish the risk of HIV transmission by transfusion in Kenya, to promote awareness of blood safety issues in this country with a mature HIV epidemic, and to identify methods to reduce the risk of HIV transmission by blood transfusion in Kenya. METHODS For 12 weeks, from April to July 1994, we collected information and blood samples from all blood donors, and pretransfusion samples were collected from all recipients in six government hospitals in Kenya. Blood donations were collected and screened for HIV according to standard practice in the hospital laboratories. Test results at a reference laboratory were compared with those of the hospital laboratories and risk of transfusion-associated HIV transmission was calculated. FINDINGS The prevalence of HIV among blood donors was 6.4% (120 of 1877) and varied by hospital (range 2-20%). HIV test results were available for 1290 donor-recipient pairs. Of these, 26 HIV-positive donations were given to HIV-negative patients. We estimate that 2.0% of transfusions transmitted HIV. Problems in the hospitals that contributed to transfusion risk included inconsistent refrigeration, data entry errors, equipment failure, and lack of a quality-assurance programme. INTERPRETATION A high proportion of blood transfusions transmitted HIV in this high-prevalence area of Africa, primarily because of erroneous laboratory practices. On the basis of these results, the Kenya Ministry of Health introduced a number of practical and inexpensive interventions to improve national blood safety.


JAMA | 2007

Evaluation and Treatment of Chagas Disease in the United States: A Systematic Review

Caryn Bern; Susan P. Montgomery; Barbara L. Herwaldt; Anis Rassi; José Antonio Marin-Neto; Roberto Oliveira Dantas; James H. Maguire; Harry Acquatella; Carlos A. Morillo; Louis V. Kirchhoff; Robert H. Gilman; Pedro A. Reyes; Roberto Salvatella; Anne C. Moore


Journal American Water Works Association | 1994

Waterborne disease in the United States, 1991 and 1992

Anne C. Moore; Barbara L. Herwaldt; Gunther F. Craun; Rebecca L. Calderon; Anita K. Highsmith; Dennis D. Juranek


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1999

Resurgence of sleeping sickness in Tambura County, Sudan

Anne C. Moore; Michaleen Richer; Mario Enrile; Edward Losio; Jacquelin M. Roberts; Deborah A. Levy


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1995

Seroprevalence of cysticercosis in an Orthodox Jewish community.

Anne C. Moore; Larry I. Lutwick; Peter M. Schantz; Joy B. Pilcher; Marianna Wilson; Allen W. Hightower; Edward K. Chapnick; Elfatih I. M. Abter; Joyce R. Grossman; Janet A. Fried; Doris A. Ware; Xue Haichou; Steven S. Hyon; Ronald L. Barbour; Robert Antar; Amin Hakim


Archive | 2017

Evaluation and Treatment of Chagas Disease in the United States

Caryn Bern; Susan P. Montgomery; Barbara L. Herwaldt; Anis Rassi; José Antonio Marin-Neto; Roberto Oliveira Dantas; James H. Maguire; Harry Acquatella; Carlos A. Morillo; Louis V. Kirchhoff; Robert H. Gilman; Pedro A. Reyes; Roberto Salvatella; Anne C. Moore


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005

Prospects for Improving African Trypanosomiasis Chemotherapy

Anne C. Moore


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2002

A 37-year-old man with fever, hepatosplenomegaly, and a cutaneous foot lesion after a trip to Africa.

Anne C. Moore; Edward T. Ryan; Mary Ann Waldron


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2002

Case records of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Weekly clinicopathological exercises. Case 20-2002. A 37-year-old man with fever, hepatosplenomegaly, and a cutaneous foot lesion after a trip to Africa.

Anne C. Moore; Edward T. Ryan; Mary Ann Waldron

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Caryn Bern

University of California

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James H. Maguire

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Roberto Salvatella

Pan American Health Organization

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Susan P. Montgomery

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Anis Rassi

Universidade Federal de Goiás

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