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Dive into the research topics where Ken Mutton is active.

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Featured researches published by Ken Mutton.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2010

Causes of encephalitis and differences in their clinical presentations in England: a multicentre, population-based prospective study

Julia Granerod; Helen E Ambrose; Nicholas W. S. Davies; Jonathan P. Clewley; Amanda L. Walsh; Dilys Morgan; Richard Cunningham; Mark Zuckerman; Ken Mutton; Tom Solomon; Katherine N. Ward; Michael P. Lunn; Sarosh R. Irani; Angela Vincent; David Brown; N. S. Crowcroft

BACKGROUND Encephalitis has many causes, but for most patients the cause is unknown. We aimed to establish the cause and identify the clinical differences between causes in patients with encephalitis in England. METHODS Patients of all ages and with symptoms suggestive of encephalitis were actively recruited for 2 years (staged start between October, 2005, and November, 2006) from 24 hospitals by clinical staff. Systematic laboratory testing included PCR and antibody assays for all commonly recognised causes of infectious encephalitis, investigation for less commonly recognised causes in immunocompromised patients, and testing for travel-related causes if indicated. We also tested for non-infectious causes for acute encephalitis including autoimmunity. A multidisciplinary expert team reviewed clinical presentation and hospital tests and directed further investigations. Patients were followed up for 6 months after discharge from hospital. FINDINGS We identified 203 patients with encephalitis. Median age was 30 years (range 0-87). 86 patients (42%, 95% CI 35-49) had infectious causes, including 38 (19%, 14-25) herpes simplex virus, ten (5%, 2-9) varicella zoster virus, and ten (5%, 2-9) Mycobacterium tuberculosis; 75 (37%, 30-44) had unknown causes. 42 patients (21%, 15-27) had acute immune-mediated encephalitis. 24 patients (12%, 8-17) died, with higher case fatality for infections from M tuberculosis (three patients; 30%, 7-65) and varicella zoster virus (two patients; 20%, 2-56). The 16 patients with antibody-associated encephalitis had the worst outcome of all groups-nine (56%, 30-80) either died or had severe disabilities. Patients who died were more likely to be immunocompromised than were those who survived (OR = 3·44). INTERPRETATION Early diagnosis of encephalitis is crucial to ensure that the right treatment is given on time. Extensive testing substantially reduced the proportion with unknown cause, but the proportion of cases with unknown cause was higher than that for any specific identified cause. FUNDING The Policy Research Programme, Department of Health, UK.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2010

Causality in acute encephalitis: defining aetiologies

Julia Granerod; Richard Cunningham; Mark Zuckerman; Ken Mutton; Nicholas W. S. Davies; Amanda L. Walsh; Katherine N. Ward; David A. Hilton; Helen E Ambrose; Jonathan P. Clewley; Dilys Morgan; Michael P. Lunn; Tom Solomon; David W. Brown; N. S. Crowcroft

Defining the causal relationship between a microbe and encephalitis is complex. Over 100 different infectious agents may cause encephalitis, often as one of the rarer manifestations of infection. The gold-standard techniques to detect causative infectious agents in encephalitis in life depend on the study of brain biopsy material; however, in most cases this is not possible. We present the UK perspective on aetiological case definitions for acute encephalitis and extend them to include immune-mediated causes. Expert opinion was primarily used and was supplemented by literature-based methods. Wide usage of these definitions will facilitate comparison between studies and result in a better understanding of the causes of this devastating condition. They provide a framework for regular review and updating as the knowledge base increases both clinically and through improvements in diagnostic methods. The importance of new and emerging pathogens as causes of encephalitis can be assessed against the principles laid out here.


BMJ | 1997

Prevalence of HIV and injecting drug use in men entering Liverpool prison

Mark A Bellis; Andrew R Weild; Nicholas J. Beeching; Ken Mutton; Qutub Syed

Studies in countries other than England and Wales suggest that a comparatively high proportion of people entering prison have a history of injecting drug use before imprisonment and that drug use does not always stop once people are incarcerated.1 Consequently the sharing of injecting equipment by drug users in a Scottish prison led to the infection of at least 13 inmates with HIV.2 Currently, little information is available on the number of drug users entering prisons in England and Wales, their HIV prevalence, or their levels of injecting drug use once incarcerated. Therefore, discussion about the potential for injecting related HIV transmission within these prisons often requires extrapolation from data gathered in other countries.3 To examine the potential role of English prisons in drug related transmission of HIV and other bloodborne viruses we …


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2011

Diagnostic Strategy Used To Establish Etiologies of Encephalitis in a Prospective Cohort of Patients in England

Helen E Ambrose; Julia Granerod; Jonathan P. Clewley; Nicholas W. S. Davies; G. Keir; R. Cunningham; Mark Zuckerman; Ken Mutton; Katherine N. Ward; S. Ijaz; N. S. Crowcroft; David W. Brown

ABSTRACT The laboratory diagnostic strategy used to determine the etiology of encephalitis in 203 patients is reported. An etiological diagnosis was made by first-line laboratory testing for 111 (55%) patients. Subsequent testing, based on individual case reviews, resulted in 17 (8%) further diagnoses, of which 12 (71%) were immune-mediated and 5 (29%) were due to infection. Seventy-five cases were of unknown etiology. Sixteen (8%) of 203 samples were found to be associated with either N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor or voltage-gated potassium channel complex antibodies. The most common viral causes identified were herpes simplex virus (HSV) (19%) and varicella-zoster virus (5%), while the most important bacterial cause was Mycobacterium tuberculosis (5%). The diagnostic value of testing cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) for antibody was assessed using 139 samples from 99 patients, and antibody was detected in 46 samples from 37 patients. Samples collected at 14 to 28 days were more likely to be positive than samples taken 0 to 6 days postadmission. Three PCR-negative HSV cases were diagnosed by the presence of virus-specific antibody in the central nervous system (CNS). It was not possible to make an etiological diagnosis for one-third of the cases; these were therefore considered to be due to unknown causes. Delayed sampling did not contribute to these cases. Twenty percent of the patients with infections with an unknown etiology showed evidence of localized immune activation within the CNS, but no novel viral DNA or RNA sequences were found. We conclude that a good standard of clinical investigation and thorough first-line laboratory testing allows the diagnosis of most cases of infectious encephalitis; testing for CSF antibodies allows further cases to be diagnosed. It is important that testing for immune-mediated causes also be included in a diagnostic algorithm.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2004

Widespread Dissemination in England of a Stable and Persistent Hepatitis B Virus Variant

Rachel L. Hallett; Siew Lin Ngui; Rolf Meigh; Ken Mutton; Elizabeth H. Boxall; Chong Gee Teo

BACKGROUND Outbreaks of acute hepatitis B among inmates of 6 prisons in 3 regions of northern England occurring from 1992 through 1994 were found to be associated with a single hepatitis B virus (HBV) variant, which was carried by 20 of the 24 case patients. We instigated a study of cases of acute hepatitis B to trace the spread and prevalence of this variant. METHODS A denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis assay was optimized to detect the HBV variant, and cases of acute HBV infection in 3 regions in England occurring from 1990 through 1996 were screened for its presence. Samples from HBV-transmission incidents that were received for molecular investigation were also tested. RESULTS The variant was identified in 117 (41%) of the 266 cases of acute hepatitis examined in representative regions in England. In North Humberside, but not in southeast England or the West Midlands, a trend toward an increase in the prevalence of the variant was observed. Furthermore, the same variant was identified in the case patients or the individuals implicated in transmission in 11 (22%) of 51 transmission incidents occurring in England from 1997 through 2002. The spread of the variant was primarily associated with injection drug use. CONCLUSIONS The finding of a single, genetically identical variant (over the 600 bp sequenced) occupying a large niche among the circulating viruses was unexpected. This finding has major implications for the use of DNA sequencing analysis in the investigation of chains of transmission. The study also highlights the need for better protection of at-risk groups through vaccination against HBV, a strategy that currently achieves poor coverage.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2013

Hepatitis B virus transmission in pre-adolescent schoolchildren in four multi-ethnic areas of England

M. A. Balogun; John V. Parry; Ken Mutton; C. Okolo; L. Benons; Helen Baxendale; T. Hardiman; E. Boxall; J. Sira; Michael Brown; S. Barnett; U. Gungabissoon; A. Williams; D. A. Kelly; S. Vijeratnam; S. Ijaz; B. Taylor; C. G. Teo; Mary Ramsay

The aim of this study was to estimate the amount of childhood hepatitis B virus transmission in children born in the UK, a very low-prevalence country, that is preventable only by universal hepatitis B immunization of infants. Oral fluid specimens were collected from schoolchildren aged 7-11 years in four inner city multi-ethnic areas and tested for the presence of antibody to hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc). Those found positive or indeterminate were followed up with testing on serum to confirm their hepatitis B status. The overall prevalence of anti-HBc in children was low [0.26%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.14-0.44]. The estimated average annual incidence of hepatitis B was estimated to be 29.26/100 000 children (95% CI 16.00-49.08). The total incidence that is preventable only by a universal infant immunization programme in the UK was estimated to be between 5.00 and 12.49/100 000. The study demonstrates that the extent of horizontal childhood hepatitis B virus transmission is low in children born in the UK and suggests that schools in the UK are an uncommon setting for the transmission of the virus. Targeted hepatitis B testing and immunization of migrants from intermediate- and high-prevalence countries is likely to be a more effective measure to reduce childhood transmission than a universal infant immunization programme.


PLOS Currents | 2017

An Outbreak of Pseudomonas Aeruginosa Infection Linked to a “Black Friday” Piercing Event

Peter MacPherson; Katherine Valentine; Victoria Chadderton; Evdokia Dardamissis; Ian Doig; Andrew Fox; Sam Ghebrehewet; Tom Hampton; Ken Mutton; Claire Sherratt; Catherine M. McCann

Introduction Outbreaks linked to cosmetic piercing are rare, but can cause significant illness. We report the investigation and management of a point-source outbreak that occurred during a Black Friday promotional event in North West England. Methods Outbreak investigation was led by Public Health England, and included active case finding among individuals pierced at a piercing premises between 25/11/2016 (Black Friday) and 7/12/2016. Detailed epidemiological, environmental (including inspection and sampling), and microbiological investigation was undertaken. Results During the Black Friday event (25/11/2016), 45 people were pierced (13 by a newly-appointed practitioner). Eleven cases were identified (7 microbiologically-confirmed, 2 probable, and 2 possible). All cases had clinical signs of infection around piercing sites, and five required surgical intervention, with varying degrees of post-operative disfigurement. All confirmed and probable cases had a scaffold piercing placed with a guide bar by the newly-appointed practitioner. Pseudomonas aeruginosa, indistinguishable at nine-locus variable-number tandem repeat loci, was isolated from four of the confirmed cases, and from pre- and post-flush samples from five separate water taps (three sinks) in the premises. Water samples taken after remedial plumbing work confirmed elimination of Pseudomonas contamination. Discussion Although high levels of Pseudomonas water contamination and some poor infection control procedures were identified, infection appeared to require additional exposure to an inexperienced practitioner, and the more invasive scaffold piercing. A proactive collaborative approach between piercers and health and environmental officials is required to reduce outbreak risk, particularly when unusually large events are planned


Journal of Infection | 1998

Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C Virus Infections: Risk Factors Among Drug Users in Northwest England

K.H. Lamden; N. Kennedy; Nicholas J. Beeching; Derek Lowe; C.L. Morrison; H. Mallinson; Ken Mutton; Q. Syed


Addiction | 2001

Predictors of hepatitis B and C infection in injecting drug users both in and out of drug treatment

Penny A. Cook; Jim McVeigh; Qutub Syed; Ken Mutton; Mark A Bellis


Journal of Medical Virology | 2006

Unique BK virus non-coding control region (NCCR) variants in hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients with and without hemorrhagic cystitis

Michael J. Carr; Grace P. McCormack; Ken Mutton; Brendan Crowley

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Nicholas J. Beeching

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Qutub Syed

Public health laboratory

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Julia Granerod

Health Protection Agency

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K.H. Lamden

Public health laboratory

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