Carol A. Kauffman
University of Cincinnati
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Featured researches published by Carol A. Kauffman.
Medical Microbiology and Immunology | 1979
John P. Phair; Carol A. Kauffman; R. Jennings; C. W. Potter
Guinea pigs were inoculated by intranasal inoculation with unadapted, influenza virus A/England/42/72, and virus was recovered from nasal washings between 3 and 10 days post-inoculation. Infected animals did not exhibit a febrile response to infection, did not produce local antibody and produced only relatively low levels of serum antibody. However, they developed delayed-type hypersensitivity to influenza virus, demonstrable by both skin tests and macrophage migration inhibition tests, which was similar to that of man. The relevance of the influenza virus specific delayed hypersensitivity in immunity to infection was examined in this model. Guinea pigs previously infected with virus or passively immunized with hyperimmune serum were relatively resistant to reinfection with influenza virus A/England/42/72. Inoculation of guinea pigs with spleen cells from immune donor animals, together with or without immune serum, did not give or enhance resistance to challenge virus infection. The results do not suggest a role for delayed hypersensitivity response in immunity to influenza virus infection.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1978
Carol A. Kauffman; Nancy Ramundo; Stanley G. Williams; Chitta R. Dey; John P. Phair; Chatrchai Watanakunakorn
Aerobic gram-negative bacilli isolated from clinical specimens from 1 January to 31 December 1976 were tested for gentamicin and tobramycin resistance by standardized disk testing. For Pseudomonas isolates, gentamicin resistance was 17.1% and tobramycin resistance was 2.8%. For other gram-negative bacilli, gentamicin resistance was 5.5% and tobramycin resistance was 5.4%. Seventy-four patients from whom gentamicin-resistant organisms were isolated from 1 January to 30 June 1976 were studied prospectively. These patients were elderly, had serious underlying diseases, and had received prior antibiotic therapy. Eleven patients carried gentamicin-resistant organisms at the time of transfer to our hospital from community hospitals or nursing homes. Of the 82 isolates from these 74 patients, 52 were from the urine. Pseudomonas was found most frequently (32 isolates), followed by Klebsiella (15 isolates), Enterobacter (10 isolates), Serratia (10 isolates), and Proteus (9 isolates). Only 3 of 32 Pseudomonas isolates caused symptomatic infection, while 16 of 50 other gram-negative bacilli were responsible for symptomatic infection. Although amikacin was the most active drug against gentamicin-resistant gram-negative bacilli and had not been used in our hospital at the time of this study, 25% of Pseudomonas and 18% of all gram-negative bacilli showed resistance to this aminoglycoside.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1976
Ian M. Baird; Jerry M. Slepack; Carol A. Kauffman; John P. Phair
Pseudomonas aeruginosa resistant to both gentamicin and carbenicillin was isolated with increasing frequency at the Cincinnati Veterans Administration Hospital during the period 1971 to 1974. A comparison of patients from whom P. aeruginosa was isolated during this period failed to reveal any significant clinical differences between the patients colonized or infected with resistant organisms and those colonized or infected with susceptible organisms. Overt clinical infection attributable to either organism was rare. The antibiotic-resistant organisms were isolated most frequently from urine. Isolation of the antibiotic-resistant organisms was more frequent from patients who had previously received gentamicin.
Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine | 1978
John P. Phair; Carol A. Kauffman; Bjornson A; L. Adams; Calvin C. Linnemann
Infection and Immunity | 1978
Calvin C. Linnemann; Carol A. Kauffman; M. R. First; Gilbert M. Schiff; John P. Phair
Infection and Immunity | 1974
Carol A. Kauffman; John P. Phair; Calvin C. Linnemann; Gilbert M. Schiff
Infection and Immunity | 1976
Carol A. Kauffman; Calvin C. Linnemann; Gilbert M. Schiff; John P. Phair
Archives of Dermatology | 1977
Jan Schwarz; Carol A. Kauffman
The American review of respiratory disease | 1976
James L. Picardi; Carol A. Kauffman; Jan Schwarz; John P. Phair
Infection and Immunity | 1978
Carol A. Kauffman; Gilbert M. Schiff; John P. Phair