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Dive into the research topics where Carina Blackmore is active.

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Featured researches published by Carina Blackmore.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2012

Dengue outbreak in Key West, Florida, USA, 2009.

Elizabeth G. Radke; Christopher J. Gregory; Kristina W. Kintziger; Erin K. Sauber-Schatz; Elizabeth Hunsperger; Glen R. Gallagher; Jean M. Barber; Brad J. Biggerstaff; Danielle Stanek; Kay M. Tomashek; Carina Blackmore

After 3 dengue cases were acquired in Key West, Florida, we conducted a serosurvey to determine the scope of the outbreak. Thirteen residents showed recent infection (infection rate 5%; 90% CI 2%–8%), demonstrating the reemergence of dengue in Florida. Increased awareness of dengue among health care providers is needed.


Javma-journal of The American Veterinary Medical Association | 2008

Executive summary of the AVMA One Health Initiative Task Force report

Lonnie J. King; Larry R. Anderson; Carina Blackmore; Michael J. Blackwell; Elizabeth A. Lautner; Leonard C. Marcus; Travis E. Meyer; Thomas P. Monath; James E. Nave; Joerg Ohle; Marguerite Pappaioanou; Justin Sobota; William Stokes; Ronald M. Davis; Jay H. Glasser; Roger K. Mahr

Lonnie J. King, dvm, ms, mpa, dacvpm; Larry R. Anderson, dvm, md; Carina G. Blackmore, dvm, phd; Michael J. Blackwell, dvm, mph; Elizabeth A. Lautner, dvm, ms; Leonard C. Marcus, vmd, md; Travis E. Meyer, bs; Thomas P. Monath, md; James E. Nave, dvm; Joerg Ohle; Marguerite Pappaioanou, dvm, mpvm, phd, dacvpm; Justin Sobota, ms, dvm; William S. Stokes, dvm, daclam; Ronald M. Davis, md; Jay H. Glasser, phd; Roger K. Mahr, dvm


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2010

Outbreak of Leptospirosis among Adventure Race Participants in Florida, 2005

Eric J. Stern; Renee L. Galloway; Sean V. Shadomy; Kathleen Wannemuehler; David Atrubin; Carina Blackmore; Taylor Wofford; Patricia P. Wilkins; Mary D. Ari; Lazenia Harris; Thomas A. Clark

BACKGROUND On 21 November 2005, a 32-year-old male resident of New York was hospitalized with suspected leptospirosis. He had participated in an endurance-length swamp race on 4-5 November 2005 outside of Tampa, Florida. METHODS We interviewed racers to assess illness, medical care, and race activities. A suspected case was defined as fever plus > or = 2 signs or symptoms of leptospirosis occurring in a racer after 4 November 2005. Individuals with suspected cases were referred for treatment as needed and were asked to submit serum samples for microscopic agglutination testing (MAT) and for rapid testing by the dot enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay dipstick immunoglobulin M immunoassay. RESULTS The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and participating state health departments interviewed 192 (96%) of 200 racers from 32 states and Canada. Forty-four (23%) of 192 racers met the definition for a suspected case. The median age of the patients was 37 years (range, 19-66 years), and 128 (66.7%) were male. Fourteen (45%) of the 31 patients with suspected cases who were tested had their cases confirmed by serological testing (a single sample with MAT titer > or = 400), including the index case patient. Organisms of a potential novel serovar (species Leptospira noguchii) were isolated in culture from 1 case patient. Factors associated with increased risk of leptospirosis included swallowing river water (odds ratio [OR], 3.4; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.6-7.0), swallowing swamp water (OR, 2.4; 95% CI, 1.1-5.2), and being submerged in any water (OR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1.1-4.7). CONCLUSIONS This report describes a leptospirosis outbreak that resulted in a high rate of symptomatic infection among adventure racers in Florida. The growing popularity of adventure sports may put more people at risk for leptospirosis, even in areas that have not previously been considered areas of leptospirosis endemicity.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2006

Outbreak of toxic anterior segment syndrome following cataract surgery associated with impurities in autoclave steam moisture

Walter C. Hellinger; Saiyid Akbar Hasan; Laura P. Bacalis; Deborah M. Thornblom; Susan C. Beckmann; Carina Blackmore; Terri S. Forster; Jason F. Tirey; Mary J. Ross; Christian D. Nilson; Nick Mamalis; Julia E. Crook; Rick E. Bendel; Rajesh K. Shetty; Michael W. Stewart; James P. Bolling; Henry F. Edelhauser

BACKGROUND Toxic anterior segment syndrome (TASS), a complication of cataract surgery, is a sterile inflammation of the anterior chamber of the eye. An outbreak of TASS was recognized at an outpatient surgical center and its affiliated hospital in December 2002. METHODS Medical records of patients who underwent cataract surgery during the outbreak were reviewed, and surgical team members who participated in the operations were interviewed. Potential causes of TASS were identified and eliminated. Feedwater from autoclave steam generators and steam condensates were analyzed by use of spectroscopy and ion chromatography. RESULTS During the outbreak, 8 (38%) of 21 cataract operations were complicated by TASS, compared with 2 (0.07%) of 2,713 operations performed from January 1996 through November 2002. Results of an initial investigation suggested that cataract surgical equipment may have been contaminated by suboptimal equipment reprocessing or as a result of personnel changes. The frequency of TASS decreased (1 of 44 cataract operations) after reassignment of personnel and revision of equipment reprocessing procedures. Further investigation identified the presence of impurities (eg, sulfates, copper, zinc, nickel, and silica) in autoclave steam moisture, which was attributed to improper maintenance of the autoclave steam generator in the outpatient surgical center. When impurities in autoclave steam moisture were eliminated, no cases of TASS were observed after more than 1,000 cataract operations. CONCLUSION Suboptimal reprocessing of cataract surgical equipment may evolve over time in busy, multidisciplinary surgical centers. Clinically significant contamination of surgical equipment may result from inappropriate maintenance of steam sterilization systems. Standardization of protocols for reprocessing of cataract surgical equipment may prevent outbreaks of TASS and may be of assistance during outbreak investigations.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2006

Fatal Hemorrhagic Fever Caused by West Nile Virus in the United States

Christopher D. Paddock; William L. Nicholson; Julu Bhatnagar; Cynthia S. Goldsmith; Patricia W. Greer; Edward B. Hayes; Joseph A. Risko; Corey Henderson; Carina Blackmore; Robert S. Lanciotti; Grant L. Campbell; Sherif R. Zaki

BACKGROUND Most West Nile virus (WNV) infections in humans are asymptomatic; severe disease occurs in relatively few patients and typically manifests as encephalitis, meningitis, or acute flaccid paralysis. A few cases of life-threatening disease with diffuse hemorrhagic manifestations have been reported in Africa; however, this clinical presentation has not been documented for any of the >16,700 cases of WNV disease reported in the United States during 1999-2004. We describe a case of fulminant WNV infection in a 59-year-old Florida man who died following a brief illness that resembled hemorrhagic disease caused by Rickettsia reckettsii, dengue virus or yellow fever virus. METHODS Traditional and contemporary diagnostic assays, including culture isolation, electron microscopic examination, reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction amplification, and immunohistochemical stains, were used to confirm systemic WNV infection in the patient. RESULTS WNV was isolated in a cell culture from a skin biopsy specimen obtained from the patient shortly prior to death. Electron microscopic examination identified the isolate as a flavivirus, and reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction amplified specific WNV sequences from the isolate and patient tissue. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction identified approximately 1x10(7) viral copies/mL in the patients serum. WNV antigens were detected by immunohistochemical stains in intravascular mononuclear cells and endothelium in skin, lung, liver, kidney, spleen, bone marrow, and central nervous system; no viral antigens were identified in neurons or glial cells of the central nervous system. CONCLUSIONS Although hemorrhagic disease is a rare manifestation of WNV infection, the findings provided by this report may offer new insights regarding the clinical spectrum and pathogenesis of WNV disease in humans.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013

Clinical findings for fungal infections caused by methylprednisolone injections.

Tom Chiller; Monika Roy; Duc Nguyen; Alice Guh; Anurag N. Malani; Robert Latham; Sheree Peglow; Tom Kerkering; David I. Kaufman; Jevon McFadden; James W. Collins; Marion Kainer; Joan Duwve; David Trump; Carina Blackmore; Christina Tan; Angela A. Cleveland; Tara MacCannell; Atis Muehlenbachs; Sherif R. Zaki; Mary E. Brandt; John A. Jernigan

BACKGROUND Since September 18, 2012, public health officials have been investigating a large outbreak of fungal meningitis and other infections in patients who received epidural, paraspinal, or joint injections with contaminated lots of methylprednisolone acetate. Little is known about infections caused by Exserohilum rostratum, the predominant outbreak-associated pathogen. We describe the early clinical course of outbreak-associated infections. METHODS We reviewed medical records for outbreak cases reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention before November 19, 2012, from the six states with the most reported cases (Florida, Indiana, Michigan, New Jersey, Tennessee, and Virginia). Polymerase-chain-reaction assays and immunohistochemical testing were performed on clinical isolates and tissue specimens for pathogen identification. RESULTS Of 328 patients without peripheral-joint infection who were included in this investigation, 265 (81%) had central nervous system (CNS) infection and 63 (19%) had non-CNS infections only. Laboratory evidence of E. rostratum was found in 96 of 268 patients (36%) for whom samples were available. Among patients with CNS infections, strokes were associated with an increased severity of abnormalities in cerebrospinal fluid (P<0.001). Non-CNS infections were more frequent later in the course of the outbreak (median interval from last injection to diagnosis, 39 days for epidural abscess and 21 days for stroke; P<0.001), and such infections developed in patients with and in those without meningitis. CONCLUSIONS The initial clinical findings from this outbreak suggest that fungal infections caused by epidural and paraspinal injection of a contaminated glucocorticoid product can result in a broad spectrum of clinical disease, reflecting possible variations in the pathogenic mechanism and in host and exposure risk factors. (Funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.).


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2013

Toward Proof of Concept of a One Health Approach to Disease Prediction and Control

Peter M. Rabinowitz; Richard Kock; Malika Kachani; Rebekah Kunkel; Jason Thomas; J. Gilbert; Robert G. Wallace; Carina Blackmore; David Wong; William B. Karesh; Barbara Natterson; Raymond Dugas; Carol Rubin

A One Health approach considers the role of changing environments with regard to infectious and chronic disease risks affecting humans and nonhuman animals. Recent disease emergence events have lent support to a One Health approach. In 2010, the Stone Mountain Working Group on One Health Proof of Concept assembled and evaluated the evidence regarding proof of concept of the One Health approach to disease prediction and control. Aspects examined included the feasibility of integrating human, animal, and environmental health and whether such integration could improve disease prediction and control efforts. They found evidence to support each of these concepts but also identified the need for greater incorporation of environmental and ecosystem factors into disease assessments and interventions. The findings of the Working Group argue for larger controlled studies to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of the One Health approach.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2010

Algorithm for the diagnosis of anaphylaxis and its validation using population-based data on emergency department visits for anaphylaxis in Florida

Laurel Harduar-Morano; Michael R. Simon; Sharon Watkins; Carina Blackmore

BACKGROUND Epidemiologic studies of anaphylaxis have been limited by significant underdiagnosis. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to develop and validate a method for capturing previously unidentified anaphylaxis cases by using International Classification of Disease, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) based datasets. METHODS Florida emergency department data for the years 2005 and 2006 from the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration were used. Patients with anaphylaxis were identified by using ICD-9-CM codes specifically indicating anaphylaxis or an ICD-9-CM algorithm based on the definition of anaphylaxis proposed at the 2005 National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease and the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network symposium. Cases ascertained with the algorithm were compared with the traditional case-ascertainment method. Comparisons included demographic and clinical risk factors, proportion of monthly visits, and age/sex-specific rates. Cases ascertained with anaphylaxis ICD-9-CM codes were excluded from those ascertained with the algorithm. RESULTS One thousand one hundred forty-nine patients were identified by using anaphylaxis ICD-9-CM codes, and 1,602 patients were identified with the algorithm. The clinical risk factors and demographics of cases were consistent between the 2 methods. However, the algorithm was more likely to identify older subjects (P < .0001), those with hypertension or heart disease (P < .0001), and subjects with venom-induced anaphylaxis (P < .0001). CONCLUSION This study introduces and validates an ICD-9-CM-based diagnostic algorithm for the diagnosis of anaphylaxis to capture subjects missed by using the ICD-9-CM anaphylaxis codes. Fifty-eight percent of anaphylaxis cases would be missed without the use of the algorithm, including 88% of venom-induced cases.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2011

A population-based epidemiologic study of emergency department visits for anaphylaxis in Florida

Laurel Harduar-Morano; Michael R. Simon; Sharon Watkins; Carina Blackmore

BACKGROUND Previous population-based analyses of emergency department (ED) visits for anaphylaxis have been limited to small populations in limited geographic areas and focused on children or have included patients who had allergic conditions other than anaphylaxis. OBJECTIVE We sought to describe the epidemiology and risk factors among patients with anaphylaxis presenting to Florida EDs. METHODS Two thousand seven hundred fifty-one patients with anaphylaxis were identified for 2005-2006 within ED records by using the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM), and a validated ICD-9-CM-based algorithm. Age- and sex-specific rates were calculated. Regression analyses were used to determine relative risks for anaphylaxis caused by various triggers (food, venom, and medication) and risk factors (age, sex, race, and ethnicity). RESULTS The highest observed rates were among the youngest male subjects (8.2/100,000 Floridians aged 0-4 years) and among adult female subjects (15-54 years) grouped in 10-year age categories (9.9-10.9/100,000 Floridians). Male and black subjects were 20% and 25%, respectively, more likely to have a food trigger than female and white subjects. White, male, and older subjects were more likely to have an anaphylaxis-related ED visit caused by insect stings. Venom-induced anaphylaxis was more likely in August through October. Children were less likely than those older than 70 years (referent) to have medication-induced anaphylaxis (P < .03). CONCLUSION This is the only ED-based population study in a US lower-latitude state. The overall rate is considerably lower than other US ED-based population studies. The rates of anaphylaxis by age group differed by sex. Male and black subjects were more likely to have a food trigger.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2011

Vibrio illness in Florida, 1998–2007

K. E. Weis; R. M. Hammond; R. Hutchinson; Carina Blackmore

This study characterized the current epidemiology of vibrio infections in Florida and examined cases reported from 1998 to 2007. Logistic regression was used to determine risk of death. There were 834 vibrio infections in 825 individuals (average annual incidence rate 4·8/1,000,000). Common Vibrio species reported were Vibrio vulnificus (33%), V. parahaemolyticus (29%), and V. alginolyticus (16%). Most exposures were attributed to wounds (42%), and the most common clinical syndromes were wound infections (45%) and gastroenteritis (42%). Almost half of individuals reported an underlying health condition. Risk of death was associated with any underlying condition and increased with the number of conditions (P<0·0001). In Florida, incidence of vibriosis associated with raw oyster consumption has decreased while incidence associated with wound infections has increased. Most prevention efforts to date have focused on oyster consumption. New educational messages focusing on the risk of vibriosis from wound infections should target high-risk populations.

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Danielle Stanek

Florida Department of Health

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Sharon Watkins

Florida Department of Health

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Richard S. Hopkins

Florida Department of Health

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Sean V. Shadomy

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Nicole J. Cohen

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Sherif R. Zaki

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Steven Wiersma

Florida Department of Health

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