Two groups of patients, each consisting of 40, were investigated for the occurrence of mycoplasmas in the urethra, bladder and upper urinary tract. Mycoplasmas were isolated significantly more frequently from the bladder urine of patients with chronic pyelonephritis than from patients with non‐infectious urinary tract diseases. Furthermore, mycoplasmas were isolated from the upper urinary tract of 5 patients with chronic pyelonephritis, while mycoplasmas could not be cultivated from the upper urinary tract of patients with non‐infectious urinary tract diease.
Transformations in collaborative work due to the introduction of new technology are inevitable, but are often difficult to study. In this paper, we consider the patterns of transformation that are seen in a patient-physician relationship based on the introduction of homecare monitoring equipment. We report findings from interviews and fieldwork with patients and physicians participating in a clinical experiment of homecare monitoring. By studying both the group of patients who receive homecare-based treatment and the control group we were able to identify transformations in the collaborative activity as caused by the homecare monitoring technology. We apply activity theory as a theoretical basis for this analysis. We consider the implications of these findings for the design of pervasive health monitoring technologies.
Coagulase-negative staphylococci are frequently isolated from the milk of women with signs of puerperal mastitis. In order to evaluate the pathogenicity of these bacteria, strains of S. epidermidis and S. saprophyticus isolated from cases of mastitis in nursing women were inoculated into the mammary glands of lactating mice. Although clinical signs of mastitis were absent, by histological examination, mastitis was demonstrated in 78-93% of the glands. Abscesses were found in a few cases only. The inoculated bacteria were re-isolated in 41-61% of the cases, and when inoculated in numbers of 10(2) to 10(4) c.f.u. the bacteria multiplied above input levels in several cases. It is concluded that coagulase-negative staphylococci isolated from the milk of women with puerperal mastitis can produce mastitis in mice and should be considered as a possible etiologic agent of mastitis in nursing women.
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