Pdf Komiyama K, Et Al

Pdf Komiyama K, Et Al

Peer-Reviewed Journal Tracking and Analyzing Disease Trends pages 1401–1556 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF D. Peter Drotman Managing Senior Editor EDITORIAL BOARD Polyxeni Potter, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Dennis Alexander, Addlestone, Surrey, UK Associate Editors Timothy Barrett, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Paul Arguin, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Barry J. Beaty, Ft. Collins, Colorado, USA Charles Ben Beard, Ft. Collins, Colorado, USA Martin J. Blaser, New York, New York, USA Ermias Belay, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Christopher Braden, Atlanta, Georgia, USA David Bell, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Arturo Casadevall, New York, New York, USA Sharon Bloom, Atlanta, GA, USA Kenneth C. Castro, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Mary Brandt, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Louisa Chapman, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Corrie Brown, Athens, Georgia, USA Thomas Cleary, Houston, Texas, USA Charles H. Calisher, Ft. Collins, Colorado, USA Vincent Deubel, Shanghai, China Michel Drancourt, Marseille, France Ed Eitzen, Washington, DC, USA Paul V. Effl er, Perth, Australia Daniel Feikin, Baltimore, Maryland, USA David Freedman, Birmingham, Alabama, USA Anthony Fiore, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Peter Gerner-Smidt, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Kathleen Gensheimer, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA Stephen Hadler, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Duane J. Gubler, Singapore Nina Marano, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Richard L. Guerrant, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA Martin I. Meltzer, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Scott Halstead, Arlington, Virginia, USA David Morens, Bethesda, Maryland, USA David L. Heymann, London, UK J. Glenn Morris, Gainesville, Florida, USA Charles King, Cleveland, Ohio, USA Patrice Nordmann, Paris, France Keith Klugman, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Tanja Popovic, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Takeshi Kurata, Tokyo, Japan Didier Raoult, Marseille, France S.K. Lam, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Pierre Rollin, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Stuart Levy, Boston, Massachusetts, USA Ronald M. Rosenberg, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA John S. MacKenzie, Perth, Australia Dixie E. Snider, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Marian McDonald, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Frank Sorvillo, Los Angeles, California, USA John E. McGowan, Jr., Atlanta, Georgia, USA David Walker, Galveston, Texas, USA Tom Marrie, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada J. Todd Weber, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Philip P. Mortimer, London, UK Fred A. Murphy, Galveston, Texas, USA Founding Editor Joseph E. McDade, Rome, Georgia, USA Barbara E. Murray, Houston, Texas, USA P. Keith Murray, Geelong, Australia Senior Associate Editor, Emeritus Stephen M. Ostroff, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, USA Brian W.J. Mahy, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, UK Richard Platt, Boston, Massachusetts, USA Copy Editors Claudia Chesley, Karen Foster, Thomas Gryczan, Gabriel Rabinovich, Buenos Aires, Argentina Jean Michaels Jones, Carol Snarey, P. Lynne Stockton Mario Raviglione, Geneva, Switzerland David Relman, Palo Alto, California, USA Production Carrie Huntington, Ann Jordan, Shannon O’Connor, Connie Schmaljohn, Frederick, Maryland, USA Reginald Tucker Tom Schwan, Hamilton, Montana, USA Editorial Assistant Christina Dzikowski Ira Schwartz, Valhalla, New York, USA Social Media/Communications Sarah Logan Gregory Tom Shinnick, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Bonnie Smoak, Bethesda, Maryland, USA Emerging Infectious Diseases is published monthly by the Centers for Disease Rosemary Soave, New York, New York, USA Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road, Mailstop D61, Atlanta, GA 30333, P. Frederick Sparling, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA USA. Telephone 404-639-1960, fax 404-639-1954, email [email protected]. Robert Swanepoel, Pretoria, South Africa The opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not neces- Phillip Tarr, St. Louis, Missouri, USA sarily refl ect the opinions of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or Timothy Tucker, Cape Town, South Africa the institutions with which the authors are affi liated. Elaine Tuomanen, Memphis, Tennessee, USA All material published in Emerging Infectious Diseases is in the public do- John Ward, Atlanta, Georgia, USA main and may be used and reprinted without special permission; proper citation, however, is required. Mary E. Wilson, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA Use of trade names is for identifi cation only and does not imply endorsement by the Public Health Service or by the U.S. Department of Health and Human ∞ Emerging Infectious Diseases is printed on acid-free paper that meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO 239.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper) Services. Emerging Infectious Diseases • www.cdc.gov/eid • Vol. 18, No. 9, September 2012 ATTENTION! Action is required to continue receiving the journal This issue of Emerging Infectious Diseases is the last you will receive unless you renew your subscription subscribe online at http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/subscribe.htm#print-sub or Complete and Fax to (404) 639-1954 or mail to Emerging Infectious Diseases CDC/MS D61 1600 Clifton Road NE Atlanta, GA 30333 USA Emerging Infectious Diseases is available at no charge to public health professionals YES, I want to continue receiving Emerging Infectious Diseases Number on mailing label: _____________________________ Name: _____________________________________________ Full mailing address: (Country names in English) Please print clearly ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ Emerging Infectious Diseases • www.cdc.gov/eid • Vol. 18, No. 9, September 2012 i September 2012 On the Cover Evaluation of Immigrant Tuberculosis Screening in Paul Jacoulet (1902–1960) Le Trésor (Corée). Industrialized Countries ................... 1422 Japan, 20th Century, Ink and paper M. Pareek et al. (Overall 23.5 cm × 30.2 cm; image 14.6 cm × Improvements are needed in current screening, 9.8 cm; card 14.6 cm × 9.8 cm) which is insuffi cient and ineffective. Pacifi c Asia Museum, Pasadena, California, USA, Gift of Eleanor L. Gilmore www.pacifi casiamuseum.org Trends in Meningococcal Disease in the United States About the Cover p. 1550 Military, 1971–2010 ........................... 1430 M.P. Broderick et al. Perspective Incidence of meningococcal disease is at a historic low because of universal vaccination. Hepatitis E, a Vaccine-Preventable Cause of Maternal Deaths................ 1401 A.B. Labrique et al. Prevention and Control of These deaths are substantial and could be Fish-borne Zoonotic Trematodes prevented by commercial vaccine. in Fish Nurseries, Vietnam .............. 1438 J. Hedegaard Clausen et al. Research Reducing numbers of snails and trematode eggs in nursery ponds lowered trematode transmission among fi sh. p. 1434 Effectiveness and Timing Surveillance for Infl uenza of Vaccination during School Viruses in Poultry and Swine, Measles Outbreak .............1405 West Africa, 2006–2008 ....................1446 A.A. Bonačić Marinović et al. E. Couacy-Hymann et al. Implementing a vaccination campaign during West Africa might be an animal infl uenza-free an outbreak can effectively reduce the outbreak zone. size. p. 1463 Policy Review Evaluation of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Control of Fluoroquinolone Approaches for Suspected Resistance through Infl uenza A(H1N1) pdm09 Successful Regulation, Infection, 2009–2010 ......... 1414 Australia ............................ 1453 V. Vijayan et al. A. C. Cheng et al. Variations between practice and national Restricted fl uoroquinolone use in humans recommendations could inform clinical and food animals has resulted in low rates of education in future infl uenza seasons. resistance in human pathogens. ii Emerging Infectious Diseases • www.cdc.gov/eid • Vol. 18, No. 9, September 2012 Dispatches 1461 Multiple Synchronous Outbreaks September 2012 of Puumala Virus, Germany, 2010 1496 Yersinia enterocolitica Outbreak J. Ettinger et al. Associated with Ready-to-eat Salad Mix, Norway, 2011 1465 MRSA Harboring mecA Variant E. MacDonald et al. Gene mecC, France F. Laurent et al. 1500 Acanthamoeba polyphaga mimivirus Virophage 1468 Prevalence of Oral Human Seroconversion in Travelers Papillomavirus Infection among Returning from Laos Youth, Sweden P. Parola et al. J. Du et al. 1503 Rapid Detection of 1472 Demographic Shift of Infl uenza Carbapenemase-producing A(H1N1)pdm09 during and after p. 1484 Enterobacteriaceae Pandemic, Rural India P. Nordmann et al. S. Broor et al. 1508 Multiple-Insecticide Resistance in 1476 Hospitalizations Associated Anopheles gambiae Mosquitoes, with Disseminated Southern Côte d’Ivoire Coccidioidomycosis, Arizona and C.A.V. Edi et al. California, USA A.E. Seitz et al. 1512 Schmallenberg Virus in Domestic Cattle, Belgium, 2012 1480 Reemerging Sudan Ebola Virus M.-M. Garigliany et al. Disease in Uganda, 2011 T. Shoemaker et al. 1515 Antimicrobial Drug Use p. 1501 and Macrolide-Resistant 1484 Francisella tularensis Subspecies Streptococcus pyogenes, holarctica, Tasmania, Australia, Belgium 2011 L. Van Heirstraeten et al. J. Jackson et al. 1519 Infl uenza A(H1N1)pdm09 Virus 1487 Lack of Evidence for among Healthy Show Pigs, United Chloroquine-Resistant States Plasmodium falciparum Malaria, G.C. Gray et al. Leogane, Haiti A. Neuberger et al. Letters 1490 Infectious Diseases in Children 1522 Aeromonas spp. Bacteremia and Body Mass Index in Young in Pregnant Women, Thailand– Adults Myanmar Border, 2011 G. Suh et al. 1524 bla –positive Klebsiella 1493 Inadequate Antibody OXA-181 pneumoniae, Singapore Response to Rabies Vaccine in Immnocompromised Patient 1525 Dengue Fever in South Korea, E. Kopel et al. 2006–2010 Emerging Infectious Diseases • www.cdc.gov/eid • Vol. 18, No. 9, September 2012 iii 1539 Picobirnaviruses in the Human Respiratory

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