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Active clinical trials for "Streptococcal Infections"

Results 131-140 of 142

Necrotizing Bacterial Dermohypodermitis-necrotizing Fasciitis Mono- or Multi-microbial Streptococcus...

Streptococcus Infection

The aim of the study is to evaluate streptococcal carriage by swab, pharyngeal, anal and perineal in patients with DHBN-FN, in the entourage living under the same roof as well as patients with erysipelas The main hypothesis is the major role of chronic porting of patients and entourage in DHBN-FN to SBH. Indeed, the chronic pharyngeal / anal / perineal carriage could be a gateway following a transient bacteremia for a DHBN-FN. The transmission of germs from the surrounding to the patient plays a major role: At the gateway level in the case of exogenous DHBN-FN At the origin of chronic carriage in the case of endogenous DHBN-FN Transmission of germs from the patient to the surrounding area also plays an important role in increasing the risk of invasive SBH infections in the surrounding area.

Unknown status17 enrollment criteria

Strep A Fluorescent Immunoassay and Analyzer Field Study

Strep Throat

The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the ability of the Strep A Fluorescent Immunoassay Analyzer to accurately detect a throat swab specimen for the presence or absence of Strep A when compared to culture.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Development of a Serocorrelate of Protection Against Invasive Group B Streptococcus Disease

Streptococcus Agalactiae Infection

A multicentre study to provide evidence that the relationship between an immune marker value (anti-GBS IgG concentration) and the probability of invasive GBS (iGBS) disease in infants less than 90 days of age is sufficiently strong that a vaccine able to induce an immune response will lead to a meaningful decrease in the probability of iGBS disease.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Study to Identify and Characterize Bacteria Causing Acute Otitis Media in Young Children in Turkey...

InfectionsStreptococcal

The purpose of this study is to identify and characterize the bacteria causing complicated Acute Otitis Media episode in children >= 3 months to < 5 years in Turkey.

Withdrawn16 enrollment criteria

Rapid Detection of Group B Streptococcus (Strep)-Labor and Delivery Study

Streptococcal Infections

The purpose of this study is to determine whether a rapid bedside diagnosis of group B strep (GBS) growing in the vagina and rectum can be performed with similar success to the routine culture in women who are in labor.

Withdrawn7 enrollment criteria

Time Frame for GBS Screening

GBSGroup B Streptococcal Infection

All pregnant women prenatally being followed up or admitted at Rambam HealthCare Campus, Haifa, Israel are potential participants in the study. If a patient is agreeable, the nurse/physician/research coordinator will obtain informed consent. Once informed consent is obtained, the patient can be swabbed for GBS. The swabs will be obtained at the routine follow-up at the clinic at 30, 32 and 35 weeks' gestation. If a patient is found to have a positive GBS culture at 35 weeks, she will receive antibiotic treatment during labour according to the protocol. GBS swabs taken at delivery will be compared to previous swabs taken at an earlier gestational age in order to evaluate sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of GBS swabs at each week of gestation and to determine the value of our primary hypothesis.

Withdrawn7 enrollment criteria

Study to Characterize and Identify Bacteria Causing Acute Otitis Media in Young Egyptian Children...

InfectionsStreptococcal

The purpose of this epidemiological study is to identify and characterize the bacteria causing Acute Otitis Media episodes in children aged >= 3 months to < 5 years in Egypt.

Withdrawn15 enrollment criteria

Serosurveillance Study of Maternally Derived Anti-GBS Antibody

Group B Streptococcus Carrier in ChildbirthGroup B Streptococcal Infection5 more

Globally, neonatal mortality remains unacceptably high, with little change in the death rate in the first 28 days of life since 1990, despite reductions in under-5 mortality of up to 50% over the same period. In 2014, neonatal deaths accounted for 44% of all deaths in children under 5 with neonatal infection accounting for over a third of all deaths. Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is a major cause of septicemia and meningitis in infants globally and a cause of severe adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes in up to 50% of meningitis survivors. It can also lead to sepsis in pregnant women. GBS acquisition occurs through vertical transmission in 15%-50% of infants born to a vaginally/rectally colonized mother. Maternal colonization is a prerequisite for early onset (EO) and a risk factor for late onset (LO) disease. Our proposal will provide these critical data in Uganda (a country with high neonatal disease burden) in a 12 month pilot study to determine: the burden of GBS disease in a cohort of mother/infant pairs and establish an active surveillance platform for monitoring of early and late onset neonatal infection in term and preterm infants in Uganda and compare this to the burden known for other African countries. This provides essential data on GBS disease outcomes from a high-HIV burden African cohort reflecting the usual standard of care in a low income, highly deprived urban environment. This pilot study will establish minimum disease estimates in the Ugandan cohort to determine the feasibility of a cohort study over three years to determine the level of antibody against GBS in cord blood from pregnancies where women are GBS colonized and non-colonized but whose infants do not develop GBS disease in the first three months of life and compare this to the level in the blood of infants who develop GBS disease. We will compare these results with those from other African countries such as South Africa to enable a robust estimate of potential sero-correlates of protection from natural infection against the most common GBS-disease-causing serotypes.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Genetic Susceptibility to Severe Streptococcal Infections

Invasive Streptococcal InfectionInvasive Group A Streptococcal Disease2 more

Invasive bacterial infection is a dangerous but relatively uncommon disease where bacteria spread deep into the body causing diseases like blood poisoning ('bacteraemia'), pneumonia, meningitis and others. The various bacteria of the streptococcus family are an important cause, often leading patients to require intensive care despite which, for some strains, one in five patients die. One notable form is called necrotising fasciitis, a condition where bacteria rapidly spreads through and destroys the layers of tissue just under the skin. As individuals vary greatly in their risk of developing such serious infections, investigating how the genome, the inherited blueprint of our bodies, of these patients differs from that of healthy volunteers can help to explain why the disease develops in some and not others. For some streptococcal bacteria such as Streptococcus pneumoniae this approach is already proving successful; for others such as the "Group A" strain (Streptococcus pyogenes) it has yet to be explored but carries excellent potential. The investigators have secured the support of the Lee Spark Necrotising Fasciitis Foundation to recruit from their membership survivors of streptococcal infections and some of their family members. The investigators will also ask infection specialists from NHS hospitals to invite patients they have looked after. The investigators also have a small existing collection. Taking part would involve registering information on a website, discussing the study on the telephone and then providing us with a sample of saliva from which the investigators can isolate DNA. The investigators would prepare the sample for analysis of the genome and compare the patients with both their family and an existing reference collection from healthy volunteers using technology that reads the DNA code. Our study will be a first key step in renewing efforts to understand the determinants of invasive streptococcal infection, which is important for developing better treatments and vaccines.

Unknown status35 enrollment criteria

TLR Polymorphism, ASO and Beta-hemolytic Group A Streptococcus Infections in ADHD: an Observational...

Attention Deficit-Hyperactivity Disorder

The aim of this observational cross-sectional study is to evaluate the streptococcal infection (clinical history, ASLO title and anti-DNAse title B) and autoimmunity (ABGA antibodies) in a sample of 100 adult patients diagnosed with ADHD (ie in patients in whom the disorder is permanent). Another objective will be to evaluate the frequency and types of genetic alterations of innate immunity (TLR polymorphisms, MyD88, IRAK-4) that can determine an infantile susceptibility to gram positive infections (ie S. pyogenes, S. pneumoniae, S. aureus) and the possible relationship between these elements, also in relation to comorbidity with other ABGA-related pathologies, to identify a possible pathogenetic immune mechanism of ADHD. Prevalence data will be obtained on an outpatient ADHD population for previous (history) and recent streptococcal infection (ASLO and Anti-DNAsiB), for the detection of ABGA and for the co-presence of other ABGA-related pathologies. By comparing the subgroups obtained by dividing the results on the basis of the positive infectious history, anti-streptococcus, autoantibody and comorbidity titers, it will be possible to assess whether the elevation of the ABGA titer is only linked to the previous/current infection ("infectious" group) or if there is a subpopulation of ADHD patients presenting pathological elevation of ABGA titers in the absence of infectious pictures ("immune" group). Furthermore, it is expected that the comparison of the descriptive polymorphisms TLR, MyD88 and IRAK-4 between the "infectious" and "immune" group may show a predisposition in subjects of the "immune" group.

Unknown status1 enrollment criteria
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