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Featured researches published by Juhász Ag.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2008

Prevalence and characterization of Salmonella infantis isolates originating from different points of the broiler chicken-human food chain in Hungary

N. Nógrády; Gábor Kardos; A. Bistyák; I. Turcsányi; Júlia Mészáros; Zs. Galántai; Juhász Ag; P. Samu; J.É. Kaszanyitzky; Judit Pászti; István Kiss

During the 10-month study period Salmonella contamination of broiler houses and the flocks reared in three farms (A, B and C), the slaughter houses where the flocks were slaughtered, as well as the carcass and retail raw meat products originating from them was investigated. In the broiler farm A five consecutive flocks, in the B and C farms one flock was sampled. Environmental samples were taken prior to the introductions. Environmental, drinking water, feed and faecal samples were collected regularly using standard methods. Before and during processing of the flocks, environmental and carcass samples were taken at the abattoirs. Salmonella contamination of the carcass, retail meat, as well as stool samples of farm and abattoir workers and from human illnesses registered in the same period and region were also examined. Isolation, sero-, phage- and antibiotic resistance typing, class 1 integron and plasmid profiling of the strains were performed; their genetic relationship was assessed by PFGE. Although the broiler house and the faecal samples of the 5 flocks of the farm A were negative for Salmonella, S. infantis was isolated from 20-100% of the abattoir carcass samples. The retail raw meat samples were 0-100% S. infantis positive. The environmental samples of farm B were Salmonella negative, but the examined flock was contaminated: S. infantis was identified from 43% of the faecal samples. This serotype was identified in 100% of the carcass and retail raw meat samples. From environmental samples taken before the arrival of the 1-day-old chicks in the broiler house C, S. infantis was cultured. S. infantis prevalence in the faecal samples was 35% and all the carcass and retail raw meat samples were S. infantis contaminated. Altogether 164 S. infantis strains were isolated out of which 145 were further characterized. The vast majority (142/145) of the strains belonged to phage types 217 and 213. All but one were characterized by the nalidixic acid-streptomycin-sulphonamide-tetracycline resistances, had an 885 bp class 1 integron and a large plasmid of > 168 kb in size. The strains showed > or = 88.7% genetic similarity. The results obtained shows that the same multi-drug resistant S. infantis clone was spread from the examined broiler farms contaminating the slaughter and the retail meat and appeared in the human illnesses of the examined region that was earlier detected as the dominant clone characteristic of the broiler and human population of the whole country.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2005

High co-prevalence of genogroup 1 TT virus and human papillomavirus is associated with poor clinical outcome of laryngeal carcinoma

Szládek G; Juhász Ag; Gábor Kardos; Szoke K; Tamás Major; István Sziklai; Ildikó Tar; Ildikó Márton; József Kónya; Lajos Gergely; Krisztina Szarka

Background: The aetiology and factors leading to the progression of laryngeal cancer are still unclear. Although human papillomavirus (HPV) has been suggested to play a role, reports concerning the effect of HPV infection on tumour development are controversial. Recently, transfusion transmitted virus (TTV) was suggested to play a role in certain infections as a causative or coinfecting agent. Aims: To investigate whether the development and progression of laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma is associated with coinfection with TTV and HPV. Methods: The prevalence of TTV and HPV was investigated using the polymerase chain reaction in tissue samples from 40 healthy individuals, 10 patients with recurrent papillomatosis, five patients with papillomatosis with malignant transformation, and 25 patients with laryngeal carcinoma. The obtained prevalence data were compared and analysed statistically. Results: In the 11 patients with carcinoma who had metastasis or relapse there was a high rate of coinfection with genogroup 1 TTV and HPV (eight of 11), whereas in the 14 without tumour progression no coinfection was found. Coinfection was associated with significantly lower tumour free survival in patients with carcinoma (p < 0.001). Furthermore, four of five patients who had papillomatosis with malignant transformation were coinfected with genogroup 1 TTV and HPV. Conclusions: Although the nature of cooperation between HPV and TTV needs to be investigated further, coinfection with genogroup 1 TTV and HPV appears to be associated with poor clinical outcome in laryngeal cancer.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2011

From farm to fork follow-up of thermotolerant campylobacters throughout the broiler production chain and in human cases in a Hungarian county during a ten-months period

Ivelina Damjanova; M. Jakab; T. Farkas; Júlia Mészáros; Zs. Galántai; I. Turcsányi; A. Bistyák; Juhász Ag; Judit Pászti; István Kiss; Gábor Kardos

A study tracking thermotolerant campylobacters from the setting of the broilers throughout the whole rearing period, slaughter and sale of chicken products in five consecutive broiler rotations of the same henhouse as well as in two different other farms was conducted in a well-defined geographic area (Hajdú-Bihar county, Hungary) between March 2006 and Feb 2007. All notified cases of human campylobacteriosis in this area during the study period were also included. One hundred and one, 44, 23 and 282 Campylobacter jejuni and 13, 15, 20 and 60C. coli were isolated from broiler houses, slaughterhouses, retail shops and human samples, respectively. Sixty-two isolates collected from broilers or their environment selected from different flocks (57C. jejuni, 5C. coli), 92 isolates collected from abattoirs and retail shops (72C. jejuni, 20C. coli), as well as 85 randomly selected human isolates (74C. jejuni, 11C. coli) were subjected to PFGE analysis using restriction enzymes KpnI and SmaI. Sixty-six of the isolates produced unique Sma-Kpn profiles; the majority (46) of these were of human origin. The remaining isolates formed PFGE clusters of between 2-25 isolates with 14 (12C. jejuni and 2C. coli) main clusters comprised of five or more isolates with identical KpnI-SmaI patterns. Two genetic clones of C. jejuni (clone A, n=25; clone B, n=20) included 18% of isolates from different sources. Generally, isolates from one cluster were found in 1-3 different flocks, notably, clone B was present in three rotations including those from the two independent farms. Six of the seven investigated flocks had one or two characteristic prevalent clones. Transmission of clones between consecutive flocks was frequently seen. Spread of both C. jejuni and C. coli was traced multiple times along the food chain; eight C. jejuni, but no C. coli clones were detected both in broilers and humans. These data suggest that broilers were the major source for C. jejuni but not for C. coli in the studied area and period. For C. jejuni the carryover of strains between consecutive flocks may be a common event, but the strain is eventually replaced by another and consecutive carryover events seem to be infrequent. The majority of the human disease was due to nonepidemic strains; some clones were transmitted from more than one broiler flocks (including epidemiologically unrelated flocks) to humans multiple times.


Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine | 2000

3D reconstruction based on hard tissue microtome cross-section pictures in dentistry

Csaba Hegedus; Emese Flóra-Nagy; Renáta Martos; Juhász Ag; Ildikó Fülöp; Sándor Pomaházi; István Nagy; Zoltán Tóth; Ildikó Márton; Gusztáv Keszthelyi

The aim of this study was to examine the accuracy of the computerized 3D surface analyzing and volume measuring method in dentistry. Two different types of test objects were used in the first part of the measurements. Each sample of the two groups was cross-sectioned using a hard tissue microtome. The sections were photographed on both sides and were projected on a graphical tablet and analyzed using a computer program. The measured and calculated parameters were compared. In the second part, 200 microm thick horizontal sections were prepared from 11 human incisor roots using the hard tissue microtome. This way, five sections were prepared from the apical 2 mm of each root. The effects of section thickness and number were modeled by decreasing the inclusion rate of the obtained number of sections from 10 to 2 and its influence on the calculated results was determined. This method was suitable for the approximation and analysis of 3D parameters. The results indicated that using 200-300 microm section thickness, the measured values were approximately 8-21% lower than the real parameters.


Oral Radiology | 2017

Endodontic and microsurgical treatments of maxillary lateral incisor dens invaginatus in combination with cone-beam-computed tomography fusion imaging

Karoly Mensch; Laszlo Simonffy; Csaba Dombi; Bence T. Szabó; József Varga; Juhász Ag; Csaba Dobó-Nagy

In this case report, we present the endodontic treatment and microsurgical intervention of dens invaginatus affecting a lateral incisor using cone-beam-computed tomography (CBCT). A 26-year-old woman visited us with a diagnosis of acute apical periodontitis in the upper right lateral incisor (tooth 12). Endodontic treatment of the tooth was carried out. Intraoral radiography provided limited information on the unusual anatomy of the pulp chamber and root canal system; therefore, preoperative CBCT was performed. At the 3-month recall, a radiograph revealed a 5-mm-diameter lateral transparency, and CBCT was, therefore, repeated to facilitate microsurgery treatment planning. A medical image-processing program was used to demonstrate the changes between the CBCT images obtained before and after root canal preparation. In conclusion, endodontic treatment of dens invaginatus is challenging even for endodontic specialists, because the therapy sometimes requires surgical intervention. The currently available novel three-dimensional imaging modalities may have importance in planning and following up the root canal treatment in such cases, especially when unforeseen complications arise.


Orvosi Hetilap | 2005

Dysmenorrhoea elofordulása serdülokorban

Juhász Ag; Vincze G; Zoárd Tibor Krasznai; Roland Csorba; Tamás Major


Orvosi Hetilap | 2005

[Kaposi's sarcoma].

Éva Remenyik; Juhász Ag; J. Hunyadi


Orvosi Hetilap | 1997

Humán papillomavírus génszakaszok kimutatása laryngealis daganatokban és praemalignus elváltozásokban polimeráz láncreakcióval.

Judit Czeglédy; Tamás Major; Juhász Ag; G. Répássy; Lajos Gergely


Orvosi Hetilap | 1998

HUMAN HERPESZVIRUS-8 SPECIFIKUS ANTITESTEK ELOFORDULASA MAGYAR VERADOKBAN ES KAPOSI-SARCOMAS BETEGEKBEN

Juhász Ag; Éva Remenyik; J. Hunyadi; Lajos Gergely


Orvosi Hetilap | 2004

Management of twin births

Juhász Ag; Zoárd Tibor Krasznai; Daragó P; János Zatik; Tamás Major

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J. Hunyadi

University of Debrecen

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István Kiss

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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