August L. Bourgeois
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
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The New England Journal of Medicine | 1991
Kenneth C. Hyams; August L. Bourgeois; Bruce R. Merrell; Patrick Rozmajzl; Joel Escamilla; Scott A. Thornton; Glenn M. Wasserman; Arlene Burke; Peter Echeverria; Kim Y. Green; Albert Z. Kapikian; James N. Woody
BACKGROUND Under combat conditions infectious disease can become a major threat to military forces. During Operation Desert Shield, there were numerous outbreaks of diarrhea among the U.S. forces. To evaluate the causes of and risk factors for diarrheal disease, we collected clinical and epidemiologic data from U.S. troops stationed in northeastern Saudi Arabia. METHODS Between September and December 1990, stool cultures for enteric pathogens were obtained from 432 military personnel who presented with diarrhea, cramps, vomiting, or hematochezia. In addition, a questionnaire was administered to 2022 soldiers in U.S. military units located in various regions of Saudi Arabia. RESULTS A bacterial enteric pathogen was identified in 49.5 percent of the troops with gastroenteritis. Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli and Shigella sonnei were the most common bacterial pathogens. Of 125 E. coli infections, 39 percent were resistant to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, 63 percent to tetracycline, and 48 percent to ampicillin. Of 113 shigella infections, 85 percent were resistant to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, 68 percent to tetracycline, and 21 percent to ampicillin. All bacterial isolates were sensitive to norfloxacin and ciprofloxacin. After an average of two months in Saudi Arabia, 57 percent of the surveyed troops had at least one episode of diarrhea, and 20 percent reported that they were temporarily unable to carry out their duties because of diarrheal symptoms. Vomiting was infrequently reported as a primary symptom, but of 11 military personnel in whom vomiting was a major symptom, 9 (82 percent) had serologic evidence of infection with the Norwalk virus. CONCLUSIONS Gastroenteritis caused by enterotoxigenic E. coli and shigella resistant to a number of drugs was a major problem that frequently interfered with the duties of U.S. troops during Operation Desert Shield.
Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2011
Clayton Harro; Subhra Chakraborty; Andrea Feller; Barbara DeNearing; Alicia Cage; Malathi Ram; Anna Lundgren; Ann-Mari Svennerholm; August L. Bourgeois; Richard I. Walker; David A. Sack
ABSTRACT Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) strain H10407 (serotype O78:H11 producing heat-labile toxin [LT], heat-stable toxin [ST], and colonization factor I [CFA/I]) induces reliably high diarrheal attack rates (ARs) in a human challenge model at doses of ≥109 CFU. A descending-dose challenge study was conducted with changes to the standard fasting time and buffer formulation, seeking conditions that permit lower inocula while maintaining reproducibly high ARs. In cohort 1, 20 subjects were fasted overnight and randomized 1:1:1:1 to receive H10407 at doses of 108 CFU with bicarbonate, 108 CFU with CeraVacx, 107 CFU with bicarbonate, or 107 CFU with CeraVacx. Subsequent cohorts received H10407 (107 CFU with bicarbonate) with similar fasting conditions. Cohort 2 included 15 ETEC-naïve volunteers. Cohort 3 included 10 ETEC-naïve volunteers and 10 rechallenged volunteers. In all, 25/35 (71%) ETEC-naïve recipients of 107 CFU of H10407 developed moderate or severe diarrhea (average maximum stool output/24 h = 1,042 g), and most (97%) shed H10407 (maximum geometric mean titer = 7.5 × 107 CFU/gram of stool). Only one of 10 rechallenged volunteers developed diarrhea. These rechallenged subjects had reduced intestinal colonization, reflected by quantitative microbiology of fecal samples. Among the 35 ETEC-naïve subjects, anti-lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O78 serum antibody responses were striking, with positive IgA and IgG antibody responses in 33/35 (94%) and 25/35 (71%), respectively. Anti-heat-labile enterotoxin (LTB) serum IgA and IgG responses developed in 19/35 (54%) and 14/35 (40%) subjects, respectively. Anti-CFA/I serum IgA and IgG responses were detected in 15/35 (43%) and 8/35 (23%) subjects. After the second challenge, participants exhibited blunted anti-LPS and -LTB responses but a booster response to CFA/I. This ETEC model should prove useful in the future evaluation of ETEC vaccine candidates.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1993
August L. Bourgeois; Chris H. Gardiner; Scott A. Thornton; Roger A. Batchelor; Donald H. Burr; Joel Escamilla; Peter Echeverria; Neil R. Blacklow; John E. Herrmann; Kenneth C. Hyams
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1993
Kenneth C. Hyams; John D. Malone; Albert Z. Kapikian; Mary K. Estes; Xi Jiang; August L. Bourgeois; Scott F. Paparello; Richard Hawkins; Kim Y. Green
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1986
Kenneth C. Hyams; Edward C. Oldfield; Robert McNair Scott; August L. Bourgeois; H. Gardiner; Gary Pazzaglia; Mahmoud Moussa; A. S. Saleh; O. E. Dawi; Fredric D. Daniell
Military Medicine | 1993
Scott F. Paparello; Paul Garst; August L. Bourgeois; Kenneth C. Hyams
Military Medicine | 1992
Scott A. Thornton; Stephen F. Wignall; Michael E. Kilpatrick; August L. Bourgeois; Chris H. Gardiner; Roger A. Batchelor; Donald H. Burr; John J. Oprandy; Paul Garst; Kenneth C. Hyams
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1994
S. Bassily; Kenneth C. Hyams; Nabil A. El-Masry; Z. Farid; Eleanor R. Cross; August L. Bourgeois; Ezzat Ayad; Richard G. Hibbs
Military Medicine | 1993
Kenneth C. Hyams; August L. Bourgeois; Joel Escamilla; James P. Burans; James N. Woody
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1987
Edward C. Oldfield; August L. Bourgeois; Abdul-Kadir Omar; Gary Pazzaglia