1965
DOI: 10.1159/000161812
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Die Isolierung von Listeria monocytogenes aus Stuhl-, Klärschlamm- und Erdproben

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Soil may be contaminated and permit the multiplication of the organisms and in time lead to the contamination of the the vegetation grown on it. Seeliger et al (1965) suggested this as a possible source of listeria infection in man. Nevertheless, listerias are known to survive on soil for long periods (Welshimer 1960), and there are some earlier reports (Weis 1975;Welshimer 1975) of the isolation of listerias from soil and vegetation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Soil may be contaminated and permit the multiplication of the organisms and in time lead to the contamination of the the vegetation grown on it. Seeliger et al (1965) suggested this as a possible source of listeria infection in man. Nevertheless, listerias are known to survive on soil for long periods (Welshimer 1960), and there are some earlier reports (Weis 1975;Welshimer 1975) of the isolation of listerias from soil and vegetation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Também encontram os n a lite ratu ra citações sobre a ocorrência de diarréia entre os pacientes acometidos de listeriose (30,31).…”
Section: Methodsunclassified
“…The venereal route is also a possibility. Toaff, Krochik and Rabinovitz (1962) have demonstrated Listeria in the semen of the husbands of three habitual aborters. Two of the wives also had genital listeriosis.…”
Section: Source Of Maternal Infectionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…An outbreak has also been described by Becroft et al (1971) in New Zealand involving thirteen cases with a mortality of 54%. Seeliger, Emmerling and Emmerling (1969) recorded 2004 human cases of all forms of listeriosis and 3173 animal cases in the whole of Germany between 1950 and 1966. Listeria is an important animal pathogen and, indeed, was first isolated from rabbits and guinea-pigs in Cambridge by Murray, Webb and Swann (1926).…”
Section: Incidencementioning
confidence: 99%
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