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Dive into the research topics where James P. Luby is active.

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Featured researches published by James P. Luby.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1986

Vidarabine versus Acyclovir Therapy in Herpes Simplex Encephalitis

Richard J. Whitley; Charles A. Alford; Martin S. Hirsch; Robert T. Schooley; James P. Luby; Fred Y. Aoki; Daniel F. Hanley; Andre J. Nahmias; Seng-jaw Soong

We randomly assigned 208 patients who underwent brain biopsy for presumptive herpes simplex encephalitis to receive either vidarabine (15 mg per kilogram of body weight per day) or acyclovir (30 mg per kilogram per day) for 10 days. Sixty-nine patients (33 percent) had biopsy-proved disease; 37 received vidarabine, and 32 acyclovir. The mortality in the vidarabine recipients was 54 percent, as compared with 28 percent in the acyclovir recipients (P = 0.008). Six-month mortality varied according to the Glasgow coma score at the onset of therapy. For scores of greater than 10, 7 to 10, and less than or equal to 6, mortality was 42, 46, and 67 percent in the patients treated with vidarabine, as compared with 0, 25, and 25 percent in those treated with acyclovir. A six-month morbidity assessment using an adapted scoring system revealed that 5 of 37 patients receiving vidarabine (14 percent) as compared with 12 of 32 receiving acyclovir (38 percent) were functioning normally (P = 0.021). Eight vidarabine-treated patients (22 percent) and three acyclovir-treated patients (9 percent) had moderate debility. Patients under 30 years of age and with a Glasgow coma score above 10 had the best outcome with acyclovir treatment. We conclude that acyclovir is currently the treatment of choice for biopsy-proved herpes simplex encephalitis.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1989

Tuberculosis epidemic among hospital personnel.

Charles E. Haley; Robert C. McDonald; Lois Rossi; Wilbur D. Jones; Robert W. Haley; James P. Luby

Six employees of the emergency department at Parkland Memorial Hospital developed active tuberculosis in 1983-1984. Five of the cases occurred four to 12 months after exposure to the index case, a patient with severe cavitary tuberculosis seen in the emergency department in April 1983. One resident physician developed cavitary disease after exposure to this patient. An additional employee case may have resulted from transmission from one of the initial employee cases. One immunocompromised patient may have acquired tuberculosis as a result of exposure to the index case. In addition, the tuberculin skin tests of at least 47 employees exposed to the index case converted from negative to positive. Of 112 previously tuberculin-negative emergency department employees who were tested in October 1983, 16 developed positive skin tests, including the 5 employees with active disease. Fifteen of these new positives had worked on April 7, 1983, while the index case was in the emergency department (X2 = 20.6, P less than 0.001). Factors related to the genesis of the epidemic included the disease characteristics in the index case and the recirculation of air in the emergency department. This investigation indicates that city-county hospital emergency department employees should be screened at least twice a year for evidence of tuberculosis and that the employee health services of such hospitals should regard the surveillance of tuberculosis infection among personnel at a high-priority level.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1970

Serratia marcescens infections from inhalation therapy medications: nosocomial outbreak.

Charles V. Sanders; James P. Luby; Waldemar G. Johanson; Jack A. Barnett; Jay P. Sanford

Abstract An outbreak of nosocomial infections caused by non-pigmentedSerratia marcescensis described. There were 655 bacterial isolates from 374 patients during a 10-month period; 50.4% of isolates...


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1979

Etiology of Liver Disease in Renal-Transplant Patients

Athol J. Ware; James P. Luby; Blaine Hollinger; Edwin H. Eigenbrodt; Jennifer A. Cuthbert; Carolyn Atkins; James Shorey; Alan R. Hull; Burton Combes

The etiology of 72 episodes of liver disease that developed in 62 of 162 renal-transplant recipients was evaluated. Infection with hepatitis B virus was a minor problem, and none of our patients had evidence of infection with hepatitis A. Cytomegalovirus infection was ubiquitous in the population and probably accounted for many episodes of acute liver disease. This agents role in causing chronic hepatitis is less secure. Infections with other viruses including Epstein-Barr virus, adenovirus, and the herpes viruses were only rarely associated with hepatic disease. Azathioprine was responsible for some episodes of acute cholestasis but could not be incriminated as a direct cause of chronic disease. A cause could be identified for the majority of episodes of acute hepatic dysfunction, but the cause of most of the chronic hepatitis remains undetermined. It is likely that infection with non-A, non-B hepatitis virus accounts for much of this serious, often fatal, complication of renal transplantation.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1980

Infections in hairy cell leukemia: Clinical evidence of a pronounced defect in cell-mediated immunity

Philip A. Mackowiak; Saba E. Demian; William L. Sutker; F.Kevin Murphy; James W. Smith; Ralph Tompsett; William W. Sheehan; James P. Luby

We compared infection rates in 12 patients with hairy cell leukemia (a malignant neoplasm for which the cell of origin remains controversial) with rates in 15 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (a known B-lymphocyte neoplasm) recently treated at four Dallas hospitals. We found a significantly higher over-all rate of infections in the patients with hairy cell leukemia (P = 0.004 BY Gehans variation on the generalized Wilcoxon test). This increased rate was primarily due to a significantly higher rate of infections normally controlled by the cell-mediated immune system (P = 0.005). Despite these findings, five of six patients with hairy cell leukemia who were skin-tested exhibited intact delayed type hypersensitivity, and each of the three patients examined serologically produced antibodies normally in response to recent infections. A review of the case records of 173 previously described patients with hairy cell leukemia, demonstrated a similar predilection of patients with this disease for infections normally controlled by cell-mediated immunity. In this regard, they were similar to previously described patients with Hodgkins disease. Both over-all infection rates and rates of fatal infection were highest in patients with hairy cell leukemia who received chemotherapy as their sole form of treatment and lowest in those who underwent splenectomy as their only form of antitumor therapy.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1989

Ciprofloxacin for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections.

E A Piercy; D Barbaro; James P. Luby; P A Mackowiak

Thirty-seven patients with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections and/or colonization were treated with oral ciprofloxacin (750 mg twice a day). Clinical cure or improvement of infections occurred in 91% of the patients, and bacteriologic cure occurred in 60%. Ciprofloxacin therapy suppressed methicillin-resistant S. aureus colonization in 55% of the patients. Ciprofloxacin-resistant strains emerged in 6 of the 37 patients.


Liver Transplantation | 2008

Detection and diagnosis of herpes simplex virus infection in adults with acute liver failure.

Josh Levitsky; Anupama T. Duddempudi; Fred D. Lakeman; Richard J. Whitley; James P. Luby; William M. Lee; Robert J. Fontana; Andres T. Blei; Michael G. Ison; Julie Polson; Carla Pezzia; Anne M. Larson; Timothy J. Davern; Paul Martin; Timothy Cashland; Eileen Hay; Natalie Murray; Obaid S. Shaikh; Atif Zaman; Steven Han; Brendan M. McGuire; Raymond T. Chung; Alastair D. Smith; Michael Schilsky; Adrian Reuben; Santiago Munoz; Rajender Reddy; R. Todd Stravitz; Lorenzo Rossaro; Raj Satyanarayana

Disseminated herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection may lead to acute liver failure (ALF) and the need for emergency liver transplantation (LT). The primary aim of this study was to determine the utility of HSV serological testing and HSV DNA testing by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in the diagnosis and management of indeterminate, pregnancy‐related, and known HSV‐related ALF. Stored sera obtained on study day 1 or 2 from patients enrolled in the United States ALF Study Group with indeterminate (n = 51), pregnancy‐related (n = 12), and HSV‐related (n = 4) ALF were screened for HSV DNA by PCR and serology. While 7 of the indeterminate and pregnant patients had positive anti‐HSV immunoglobulin M, none had detectable HSV DNA. The 4 known HSV cases all had high‐titer HSV DNA on presentation (range: 3.5 to 36 × 108 copies/mL). Two HSV patients underwent LT but developed posttransplant extrahepatic HSV infection despite suppression of HSV DNA with acyclovir treatment, and one of them eventually died. The 2 other fulminant HSV patients died within 48 hours of presentation. In conclusion, serum HSV DNA indicative of occult HSV infection was not detected in 51 indeterminate and 12 pregnancy‐related ALF patients. The 4 patients with known HSV‐related ALF all had high HSV DNA levels at presentation, and despite the rapid use of antiviral therapy and emergency LT, substantial morbidity and mortality were encountered, highlighting the poor prognosis with severe disseminated HSV infection. Liver Transpl 14:1498–1504, 2008.


JAMA | 2013

The 2012 West Nile Encephalitis Epidemic in Dallas, Texas

Wendy Chung; Christen M. Buseman; Sibeso N. Joyner; Sonya M. Hughes; Thomas B. Fomby; James P. Luby; Robert W. Haley

IMPORTANCE After progressive declines over recent years, in 2012 West Nile virus epidemics resurged nationwide, with the greatest number of cases centered in Dallas County, Texas. OBJECTIVE To analyze the epidemiologic, meteorologic, and geospatial features of the 2012 Dallas West Nile virus epidemic to guide future prevention efforts. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS Public health surveillance of Dallas County, an area of 2257 km2 and population of 2.4 million. Surveillance data included numbers of residents diagnosed with West Nile virus infection between May 30, 2012, and December 3, 2012; mosquito trap results; weather data; and syndromic surveillance from area emergency departments. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Incidence and age-adjusted incidence rates of West Nile neuroinvasive disease (WNND), daily prevalence of emergency department visits for asthma and skin rash, and Culex quinquefasciatus species-specific vector index (an estimate of the average number of West Nile virus-infected mosquitoes per trap-night). RESULTS The investigation identified 173 cases of WNND, 225 of West Nile fever, 17 West Nile virus-positive blood donors, and 19 deaths in 2012. The incidence rate for WNND was 7.30 per 100,000 residents in 2012, compared with 2.91 per 100,000 in 2006, the largest previous Dallas County outbreak. An unusually rapid and early escalation of large numbers of human cases closely followed increasing infection trends in mosquitoes. The Cx quinquefasciatus species-specific vector index predicted the onset of symptoms among WNND cases 1 to 2 weeks later (count regression β = 2.97 [95% CI, 2.34 to 3.60]; P < .001). Although initially widely distributed, WNND cases soon clustered in neighborhoods with high housing density in the north central area of the county, reflecting higher vector indices and following geospatial patterns of West Nile virus in prior years. During the 11 years since West Nile virus was first identified in Dallas, the log-transformed annual prevalence of WNND was inversely associated with the number of days with low temperatures below 28°F (-2.2°C) in December through February (β = -0.29 [95% CI, -0.36 to -0.21]; P < .001). Aerial insecticide spraying was not associated with increases in emergency department visits for respiratory symptoms (β = -4.03 [95% CI, -13.76 to 5.70]; P = .42) or skin rash (β = -1.00 [95% CI, -6.92 to 4.92]; P = .74). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Large West Nile virus epidemics in Dallas County begin early after unusually warm winters, revisit similar geographical distributions, and are strongly predicted by the mosquito vector index. Consideration of weather patterns and historical geographical hot spots and acting on the vector index may help prevent West Nile virus-associated illness.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1969

Clinical and laboratory features of epidemic St. Louis encephalitis.

Paul M. Southern; James W. Smith; James P. Luby; Jack A. Barnett; Jay P. Sanford

Abstract An epidemic of St. Louis encephalitis in Dallas, Tex., in 1966 again showed the characteristic clinical and epidemiological features of this disease: the occurrence of encephalitis in elde...


Gastroenterology | 1975

Spectrum of Liver Disease in Renal Transplant Recipients

Athol J. Ware; James P. Luby; Edwin H. Eigenbrodt; Dewey L. Long; Alan R. Hull

An evaluation of the hepatic dysfunction which occurred in the post-transplant period in 31 of 82 renal transplant recipients managed at Parkland Memorial Hospital has revealed three different patterns of liver disease. Two patients died in acute liver failure during an acute fulminant illness. Eight other patients suffered an acute, anicteric, and completely reversible hepatic disorder. Twenty-one patients have been afflicted with a chronic form of liver disease which, in a least 5, has progressed to an active cirrhosis. Infection with cytomegalovirus and other viruses is probably responsible for most of the liver disease we have observed in these patients, while hepatotoxicity related to therapy with azathioprine and other drugs has played only a minor role.

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Alan R. Hull

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Jay P. Sanford

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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James W. Smith

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Athol J. Ware

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Jack A. Barnett

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Paul M. Southern

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Charles E. Haley

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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