View clinical trials related to Streptococcal Infections.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to systematically evaluate the results of medical investigations to identify symptom and biological patterns and common etiologies of neurodevelopmental disorders.
This study is observational, retrospective and prospective study in pediatric patients hospitalized with invasive streptococcal A infection
Group B Streptococcus (GBS) infection is a potential aetiology of meningitis and septicemia in neonates, pregnant women and non-pregnant adults. Because the GBS disease burden is unknown in Malaysia, it is unlikely to receive much attention. This study aims to determine the prevalence of group B streptococcus isolated from non-pregnant adults, the Incidence, case-fatality ratio, antimicrobial susceptibility patterns, serotyping, genotyping and detection of the GBS virulence and pili genes from six major hospitals in Peninsular Malaysia.
This study will enroll children ages 5-17 who test positive for Group A Streptococcus (GAS) at a single clinic visit lasting approximately 30-60 minutes. The primary aim of this study is to assess the accuracy and feasibility of the CandyCollect platform to capture and detect GAS. The investigators hypothesize that the CandyCollect platform is non-inferior to gold-standard rapid antigen detection testing for GAS.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the safety and antibody (germ fighters) response of experimental (investigational) vaccine candidates against the germ group A streptococcus when injected into the arm of healthy adults.
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.
A multicentre, international case-control study to develop a biobank of sera from 150 cases of serotype III GBS disease and associated clinical information from seven countries (Malawi, Uganda, UK, the Netherlands, Italy and France), with 3:1 (450) serotype matched healthy controls.
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.
This study is an investigation of the neurologic, immunologic, and rheumatologic markers of Pediatric Acute-Onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS). PANS is a condition characterized by the abrupt, dramatic onset of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) and/or eating restriction accompanied by equally abrupt and severe co-morbid neuropsychiatric symptoms, which include anxiety, emotional lability, depression, irritability, aggression, oppositionality, deterioration in school performance, behavioral (developmental) regression, sensory amplification, movement abnormalities, sleep disturbance, and urinary frequency. PANS is thought to be caused by infection, inflammation, or alternate triggers that is associated with a brain response that leads to these symptoms. The purpose of this study is to examine specific neurologic, immunologic, rheumatologic, and genomic, components in children with the acute-onset of psychiatric symptoms. This research may begin to uncover a much larger story of autoimmune processes that are involved in psychiatric disorders of childhood. By better understanding the etiologic components of psychiatric phenomenon, future treatments may be better targeted to underlying causes.
B streptococcal infection and the major cause of death before and after the baby is born. B streptococcus infection the way of the newborn, usually infection from the mother in childbirth, if the pregnant women during pregnancy early diagnosis B streptococcus infection, it can be effective in preventing the risk of neonatal infection. Department of Health in China has been since April 15, 2012, the Scholarship holder at all pregnant women in the 35-37 weeks of pregnancy comprehensive B streptococcus screening. Infection B Streptococcus pregnant women in the labor process, the use of prophylactic antibiotics can be effective in reducing neonatal B streptococcus infection, but the possibility of the fetus being infected for the condition of premature birth or early rupture of membranes are still unable to fully hedge. In this study, the 35 to 37 weeks gestation examination confirmed infected B Streptococcus pregnant women, oral lactobacillus capsules B streptococcus infection treatment efficacy and safety assessment of clinical research. To assess whether oral administration of lactic acid bacteria will affect vaginitis incidence.