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Dive into the research topics where Timothy J. Doyle is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy J. Doyle.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2002

Investigation of bioterrorism-related anthrax, United States, 2001: epidemiologic findings.

Daniel B. Jernigan; Pratima L. Raghunathan; Beth P. Bell; Ross J. Brechner; Eddy A. Bresnitz; Jay C. Butler; Marty Cetron; Mitch Cohen; Timothy J. Doyle; Marc Fischer; Carolyn M. Greene; Kevin S. Griffith; Jeannette Guarner; James L. Hadler; James A. Hayslett; Richard F. Meyer; Lyle R. Petersen; Michael R. Phillips; Robert W. Pinner; Tanja Popovic; Conrad P. Quinn; Jennita Reefhuis; Dori B. Reissman; Nancy E. Rosenstein; Anne Schuchat; Wun-Ju Shieh; Larry Siegal; David L. Swerdlow; Fred C. Tenover; Marc S. Traeger

In October 2001, the first inhalational anthrax case in the United States since 1976 was identified in a media company worker in Florida. A national investigation was initiated to identify additional cases and determine possible exposures to Bacillus anthracis. Surveillance was enhanced through health-care facilities, laboratories, and other means to identify cases, which were defined as clinically compatible illness with laboratory-confirmed B. anthracis infection. From October 4 to November 20, 2001, 22 cases of anthrax (11 inhalational, 11 cutaneous) were identified; 5 of the inhalational cases were fatal. Twenty (91%) case-patients were either mail handlers or were exposed to worksites where contaminated mail was processed or received. B. anthracis isolates from four powder-containing envelopes, 17 specimens from patients, and 106 environmental samples were indistinguishable by molecular subtyping. Illness and death occurred not only at targeted worksites, but also along the path of mail and in other settings. Continued vigilance for cases is needed among health-care providers and members of the public health and law enforcement communities.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2000

Infectious Disease Morbidity in the US Region Bordering Mexico, 1990–1998

Timothy J. Doyle; Ralph T. Bryan

The United States and Mexico share an international boundary approximately 3000 km long. This border separates 2 nations with great differences in health status. The objective of this study was to assess morbidity due to infectious diseases in the US region bordering Mexico. The incidence between 1990 and 1998 of 22 nationally notifiable infectious diseases was compared between border and nonborder regions. Disease rates, reflected as rate ratios, were higher in the border region for botulism, brucellosis, diphtheria, hepatitis A, measles, mumps, rabies, rubella, salmonellosis, and shigellosis than in either of 2 nonborder comparison regions. These data indicate that incidence rates for a variety of infectious diseases of public health importance are significantly higher in the United States along the Mexican border than in nonborder regions. These results suggest that an inadequate public health infrastructure may contribute to excess morbidity due to infectious diseases in the border region.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2003

Clinical Features that Discriminate Inhalational Anthrax from Other Acute Respiratory Illnesses

Matthew J. Kuehnert; Timothy J. Doyle; Holly A. Hill; Carolyn B. Bridges; John A. Jernigan; Peter M. Dull; Dori B. Reissman; David A. Ashford; Daniel B. Jernigan

Inhalational anthrax (IA) is a rapidly progressive disease that frequently results in sepsis and death, and prompt recognition is critical. To distinguish IA from other causes of acute respiratory illness, patients who had IA were compared with patients in an ambulatory clinic who had influenza-like illness (ILI) and with hospitalized patients who had community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) at the initial health care visit. Compared with patients who had ILI, patients who had IA were more likely to have tachycardia, high hematocrit, and low albumin and sodium levels and were less likely to have myalgias, headache, and nasal symptoms. Scoring systems were devised to compare IA with ILI or CAP on the basis of strength of association. For ILI, a score of > or =4 captured all 11 patients with IA and excluded 664 (96.1%) of 691 patients with ILI. Compared with patients who had CAP, patients with IA were more likely to have nausea or vomiting, tachycardia, high transaminase levels, low sodium levels, and normal white blood cell counts. For CAP, a score of > or =3 captured 9 (81.8%) of 11 patients with IA and excluded 528 (81.2%) of 650 patients with CAP. In conclusion, selected clinical features of patients with IA differ from those of patients with ILI and are more similar to those of patients with CAP.


Infectious Disease Clinics of North America | 1998

VIRAL HEMORRHAGIC FEVERS AND HANTAVIRUS INFECTIONS IN THE AMERICAS

Timothy J. Doyle; Ralph T. Bryan; Clarence J. Peters

Several arenaviruses and hantaviruses have been isolated in the Americas during the last 4 decades. These are rodent-borne viruses responsible for the South American hemorrhagic fevers (SAHF) and hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS). Although rare, SAHF and HPS are serious illnesses with high mortality rates. Most viral isolates found in the Americas represent New World lineages of their respective viral families. Their presence in the Western hemisphere is likely ancient, their relationship with their rodent hosts is likely coevolutionary, and their recent detection forebodes the likelihood of detecting additional arena- and hantaviral species in the Americas.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Maternal and neonatal outcomes among pregnant women with 2009 pandemic influenza A(H1N1) illness in Florida, 2009-2010: a population-based cohort study.

Timothy J. Doyle; Kate Goodin; Janet J. Hamilton

Introduction Pregnant women have been identified as a high risk group for severe illness with 2009 pandemic influenza A(H1N1) virus infection (pH1N1). Obesity has also been identified as a risk factor for severe illness, though this has not been thoroughly assessed among pregnant women. The objectives of this study were to provide risk estimates for adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with pH1N1 illness during pregnancy and to assess the role of obesity in these outcomes. Methods We established a retrospective population-based cohort of all live births occurring in Florida during the first 15 months of the pandemic. Illness with pH1N1 during pregnancy was ascertained through record linkage with the Florida state notifiable disease surveillance database. Data from the birth record, including pre-pregnancy body mass index, were analyzed to assess risk of adverse outcomes associated with pH1N1 illness. Results A total of 194 women were identified through surveillance with pH1N1 illness during pregnancy. Children born to women with pH1N1 illness during pregnancy were at increased risk for low birth weight [OR (95%CI): 1.78 (1.11-2.860)], premature birth [2.21 (1.47-3.330)], and infant death [4.46 (1.80-11.00)], after adjusting for other factors. Women with pH1N1 illness during pregnancy were at increased risk for severe outcomes including admission to an intensive care unit. Obesity was an observed risk factor, both for the more severe pH1N1 illness detected through surveillance, and for severe maternal outcomes. Conclusions Case-patients in this analysis likely represent the most severely ill subset of all women infected with pH1N1 during pregnancy, limiting the generalizability of these findings to more severely ill patients rather than influenza infection in general. Nevertheless, these results suggest that more severe pH1N1 illness during pregnancy is associated with adverse neonatal outcomes and that pregnant women should continue to be targeted for appropriate prophylaxis and early treatment.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1999

Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome in Pregnancy

Michael J. Howard; Timothy J. Doyle; Frederick Koster; Sherif R. Zaki; Ali S. Khan; Eskild A. Petersen; Clarence J. Peters; Ralph T. Bryan

This comprehensive case review of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) during pregnancy in 5 women characterizes the effect of Sin Nombre virus infection on maternal and fetal outcomes. Histopathologic, serological, and clinical information were evaluated for evidence of vertical transmission. Maternal ages ranged from 20 to 34 years and gestational ages from 13 to 29 weeks. Symptoms, physical findings, and laboratory values other than those related to pregnancy were not noticeably different from those of nonpregnant patients with HPS, although fevers were somewhat lower. One maternal death and 2 fetal losses occurred. Gross, microscopic, and immunohistochemical examination for hantavirus antigen were done on 2 fetal autopsies and 3 placentas showing no evidence of transplacental hantavirus transmission. There was no serological evidence of conversion in the 3 surviving children. Maternal and fetal outcomes of HPS appear similar to those of nonpregnant HPS patients and of pregnant patients with other causes of acute respiratory distress syndrome. No evidence of vertical transmission of Sin Nombre virus was found.


Seminars in Pediatric Infectious Diseases | 1997

Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome

Ralph T. Bryan; Timothy J. Doyle; Ronald L. Moolenaar; Anne K. Pflieger; Ali S. Khan; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Clarence J. Peters

Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS)1 is an acute zoonotic viral disease often characterized by fever, myalgia, and gastrointestinal complaints followed by the abrupt onset of respiratory distress and hypotension. The illness can progress rapidly to severe respiratory failure and shock. The reservoir for the virus in New Mexico is rodents of the genus Peromyscus, mainly the deer mouse Peromyscus maniculatus, which excretes the virus in its urine, feces, and saliva. Humans acquire infection primarily when they breathe in air contaminated with aerosolized virus particles from rodent urine, droppings, or saliva, and rarely through direct contact with infected rodents, rodent droppings, or nests.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2010

Cluster of Serogroup W135 Meningococci, Southeastern Florida, 2008–2009

Timothy J. Doyle; Alvaro Mejia-Echeverry; Paul Fiorella; Fermin Leguen; John Livengood; Robyn Kay; Richard S. Hopkins

Recently, 14 persons in southeastern Florida were identified with Neisseria meningitidis serogroup W135 invasive infections. All isolates tested had matching or near-matching pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns and belonged to the multilocus sequence type 11 clonal complex. The epidemiologic investigation suggested recent endemic transmission of this clonal complex in southeastern Florida.


BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making | 2005

PHSkb: A knowledgebase to support notifiable disease surveillance

Timothy J. Doyle; Haobo Ma; Samuel L. Groseclose; Richard S. Hopkins

BackgroundNotifiable disease surveillance in the United States is predominantly a passive process that is often limited by poor timeliness and low sensitivity. Interoperable tools are needed that interact more seamlessly with existing clinical and laboratory data to improve notifiable disease surveillance.DescriptionThe Public Health Surveillance Knowledgebase (PHSkb™) is a computer database designed to provide quick, easy access to domain knowledge regarding notifiable diseases and conditions in the United States. The database was developed using Protégé ontology and knowledgebase editing software. Data regarding the notifiable disease domain were collected via a comprehensive review of state health department websites and integrated with other information used to support the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS). Domain concepts were harmonized, wherever possible, to existing vocabulary standards. The knowledgebase can be used: 1) as the basis for a controlled vocabulary of reportable conditions needed for data aggregation in public health surveillance systems; 2) to provide queriable domain knowledge for public health surveillance partners; 3) to facilitate more automated case detection and surveillance decision support as a reusable component in an architecture for intelligent clinical, laboratory, and public health surveillance information systems.ConclusionsThe PHSkb provides an extensible, interoperable system architecture component to support notifiable disease surveillance. Further development and testing of this resource is needed.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2016

Clinical and Epidemiological Characterization of the First Recognized Outbreak of Dengue Virus-Type 2 in Mozambique, 2014

Marilia Massangaie; G. Pinto; Fernando Padama; Geraldo Chambe; Mariana C. da Silva; Inocêncio Mate; Celia Chirindza; Sadia Ali; Sãozinha Agostinho; Daniel Chilaule; Jacqueline Weyer; Chantel le Roux; Ana Paula Abílio; Cynthia Semá Baltazar; Timothy J. Doyle; Julie Cliff; Janusz T. Paweska; Eduardo Samo Gudo

Since the first reported epidemic of dengue in Pemba, the capital of Cabo Delgado province, in 1984-1985, no further cases have been reported in Mozambique. In March 2014, the Provincial Health Directorate of Cabo Delgado reported a suspected dengue outbreak in Pemba, associated with a recent increase in the frequency of patients with nonmalarial febrile illness. An investigation conducted between March and June detected a total of 193 clinically suspected dengue patients in Pemba and Nampula, the capital of neighboring Nampula Province. Dengue virus-type 2 (DENV-2) was detected by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in sera from three patients, and 97 others were classified as probable cases based on the presence of DENV nonstructural protein 1 antigen or anti-DENV immunoglobulin M antibody. Entomological investigations demonstrated the presence of Aedes aegypti mosquitos in both Pemba and Nampula cities.

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Ralph T. Bryan

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Clarence J. Peters

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Ali S. Khan

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Daniel B. Jernigan

National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases

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Dori B. Reissman

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Richard S. Hopkins

Florida Department of Health

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Samuel L. Groseclose

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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