12 results on '"Benhabib H"'
Search Results
2. Évaluation de la faisabilité de la tomoscintigraphie myocardique précoce au sestamibi synchronisée à l’électrocardiogramme
- Author
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Guernou, M., Manrique, A., Benhabib, H., Valette, F., Amaral, A., Joret, C., Turzo, A., Salaun, P.-Y., Bizais, Y., and Guillo, P.
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- 2007
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3. MRI Radiomics Analysis in the Diagnostic Differentiation of Malignant Soft Tissue Myxoid Sarcomas From Benign Soft Tissue Musculoskeletal Myxomas.
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Benhabib H, Brandenberger D, Lajkosz K, Demicco EG, Tsoi KM, Wunder JS, Ferguson PC, Griffin AM, Naraghi A, Haider MA, and White LM
- Abstract
Background: Differentiation of benign myxomas and malignant myxoid sarcomas can be difficult with an overlapping spectrum of morphologic MR findings., Purpose: To assess the diagnostic utility of MRI radiomics in the differentiation of musculoskeletal myxomas and myxoid sarcomas., Study Type: Retrospective., Population: A total of 523 patients were included; histologically proven myxomas (N = 201) and myxoid sarcomas (N = 322), randomly divided (70:30) into training:test subsets., Sequence/field Strength: T1-weighted (T1W), T2-weighted fat-suppressed (fluid-sensitive), and T1-weighted post-contrast (T1W + C) sequences at 1.0 T, 1.5 T, or 3.0 T., Assessment: Seven semantic (qualitative) tumor features were assessed in each case. Manual 3D tumor segmentations performed with radiomics features extracted from T1W, fluid-sensitive, and T1W + C acquisitions. Models were constructed based on radiomic features from individual sequences and from their combination, both with and without the addition of qualitative tumor features., Statistical Tests: Intraclass correlation evaluated in 60 cases segmented by three readers. Features with intraclass correlation <0.7 excluded from further analysis. Boruta feature selection and Random Forest modeling performed using the training-dataset, with resultant models used to assess class discrimination (myxoma vs. myxoid sarcoma) in the test dataset. Radiomics score defined as probability class = myxoma. Logistic regression modeling employed to estimate performance of the radiomics score. Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) was used to assess diagnostic performance, and DeLong's test to assess performance between constructed models. A P-value <0.05 was considered significant., Results: Four qualitative semantic features showed significant predictive power in class discrimination. Radiomic models demonstrated excellent differentiation of myxomas from myxoid sarcomas: AUC of 0.9271 (T1W), 0.9049 (fluid-sensitive), and 0.9179 (T1W + C). Incorporation of multiparametric data or semantic features did not significantly improve model performance (P ≥ 0.08) compared to radiomic models derived from any individual MRI sequence alone., Data Conclusion: MRI radiomics appears to be accurate in the differentiation of myxomas from myxoid sarcomas. Classification performance did not improve when incorporating qualitative features or multiparametric imaging data., Plain Language Summary: Accurately distinguishing between benign soft tissue myxomas and malignant myxoid sarcomas is essential for guiding appropriate management but remains challenging with conventional MRI interpretation. This study utilized radiomics, a method that extracts quantitative mathematically derived features from images, to develop predictive models based on routine MRI examination. Analyzing over 500 cases, MRI radiomics demonstrated excellent diagnostic accuracy in differentiating between benign myxomas and malignant myxoid sarcomas, highlighting the potential of the technique, as a powerful non-invasive tool that could complement current diagnostic approaches, and enhance clinical decision-making in patients with soft tissue myxoid tumors of the musculoskeletal system., Level of Evidence: 3 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2., (© 2025 The Author(s). Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.)
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- 2025
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4. Death due to sickle cell crisis: a case report.
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Koster T, Boyer E, Clutterbuck DJ, Benhabib H, and Herath J
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- Humans, Male, Adult, Death, Sudden etiology, Fatal Outcome, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Female, Anemia, Sickle Cell complications
- Abstract
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the most common hereditary hemoglobinopathy worldwide. It results in characteristic acute and chronic findings on postmortem computed tomography (PMCT), macroscopic and microscopic examinations. While the diagnostic imaging and macroscopic features are not specific for SCD on their own, when coupled with microscopic features such as sickled erythrocytes and evidence of chronic venous congestion (i.e., Gamna-Gandy bodies), these clues can help alert forensic pathologists to the presence of SCD. Despite the prevalence of the disease and the constellation of findings alluded to above, SCD is not often explored in forensic pathology literature. This case demonstrates classic acute and chronic features of SCD on PMCT, macroscopic and microscopic examinations. It explores the pathophysiology leading to sudden and unexpected death in a person with SCD and possible pitfalls in attribution of cause of death., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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5. Standardized Reporting on the Preoperative CT Assessment of Potential Living Renal Transplant Donors: Can We Create a Universal Report Standard to Meet the Needs of Transplant Urologists?
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Benhabib H, Crivellaro PS, Osman H, Gunaseelan S, Chung A, Lee JY, Colak E, Leung V, O'Sullivan J, Walsh C, and Kielar A
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- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Reproducibility of Results, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Urologists, Kidney Transplantation
- Abstract
Purpose: Determine whether standardized template reporting for the preoperative assessment of potential living renal transplant donors improves the comprehensiveness of radiology reports to meet the needs of urologists performing renal transplants. Methods: Urologist and radiologist stakeholders from renal transplant centres in our province ratified a standardized reporting template for evaluation of potential renal donors. Three centres (A, B, and C) were designated "intervention" groups. Centre D was the control group, given employment of a site-specific standardized template prior to study commencement. Up to 100 consecutive CT scan reports per centre, pre- and post-implementation of standardized reporting, were evaluated for reporting specific outcome measures. Results: At baseline, all intervention groups demonstrated poor reporting of urologist-desired outcome measures. Centre A discussed 5/13 variables (38%), Centre B discussed 6/13 variables (46%), and Centre C only discussed 1/13 variables (8%) with ≥90% reliability. The control group exhibited consistent reporting, with 11/13 variables (85%) reported at ≥90% reliability. All institutions in the intervention group exhibited excellent compliance to structured reporting post-template implementation (Centres A = 95%, B = 100%, and C = 77%, respectively). Additionally, all intervention centres demonstrated a significant improvement in the comprehensiveness of reports post-template implementation, with statistically significant increases in the reporting of all variables under-reported at baseline ( P > .01). Conclusion: Standardized templates across our province for CT scans of potential renal donors promote completeness of reports. Radiologists can reliably provide our surgical colleagues with needed preoperative anatomy and incidental findings, helping to determine suitable transplant donors and reduce potential complications associated with organ retrieval., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2023
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6. Intradiscal oxygen-ozone chemonucleolysis versus microdiscectomy for lumbar disc herniation radiculopathy: a non-inferiority randomized control trial.
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Kelekis A, Bonaldi G, Cianfoni A, Filippiadis D, Scarone P, Bernucci C, Hooper DM, Benhabib H, Murphy K, and Buric J
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- Adolescent, Back Pain surgery, Diskectomy, Female, Humans, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Male, Oxygen therapeutic use, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Treatment Outcome, Intervertebral Disc Chemolysis methods, Intervertebral Disc Displacement complications, Intervertebral Disc Displacement surgery, Low Back Pain drug therapy, Low Back Pain surgery, Ozone therapeutic use, Radiculopathy surgery
- Abstract
Background Context: Low back pain with or without radicular leg pain is an extremely common health condition significantly impacting patient's activities and quality of life. When conservative management fails, epidural injections providing only temporary relief, are frequently utilized. Intradiscal oxygen-ozone may offer an alternative to epidural injections and further reduce the need for microdiscectomy., Purpose: To compare the non-inferiority treatment status and clinical outcomes of intradiscal oxygen-ozone with microdiscectomy in patients with refractory radicular leg pain due to single-level contained lumbar disc herniations., Study Design / Setting: Multicenter pilot prospective non-inferiority blocked randomized control trial conducted in three European hospital spine centers., Patient Sample: Forty-nine patients (mean 40 years of age, 17 females/32 males) with a single-level contained lumbar disc herniation, radicular leg pain for more than six weeks, and resistant to medical management were randomized, 25 to intradiscal oxygen-ozone and 24 to microdiscectomy. 88% (43 of 49) received their assigned treatment and constituted the AS-Treated (AT) population., Outcome Measures: Primary outcome was overall 6-month improvement over baseline in leg pain. Other validated clinical outcomes, including back numerical rating pain scores (NRS), Roland Morris Disability Index (RMDI) and EQ-5D, were collected at baseline, 1 week, 1-, 3-, and 6-months. Procedural technical outcomes were recorded and adverse events were evaluated at all follow-up intervals., Methods: Oxygen-ozone treatment performed as outpatient day surgeries, included a one-time intradiscal injection delivered at a concentration of 35±3 μg/cc of oxygen-ozone by a calibrated delivery system. Discectomies performed as open microdiscectomy inpatient surgeries, were without spinal instrumentation, and not as subtotal microdiscectomies. Primary analyses with a non-inferiority margin of -1.94-point difference in 6-month cumulative weighted mean leg pain NRS scores were conducted using As-Treated (AT) and Intent-to-Treat (ITT) populations. In post hoc analyses, differences between treatment groups in improvement over baseline were compared at each follow-up visit, using baseline leg pain as a covariate., Results: In the primary analysis, the overall 6-month difference between treatment groups in leg pain improvement using the AT population was -0.31 (SE, 0.84) points in favor of microdiscectomy and using the ITT population, the difference was 0.32 (SE, 0.88) points in favor of oxygen-ozone. The difference between oxygen-ozone and microdiscectomy did not exceed the non-inferiority 95% confidence lower limit of treatment difference in either the AT (95% lower limit, -1.72) or ITT (95% lower limit, -1.13) populations. Both treatments resulted in rapid and statistically significant improvements over baseline in leg pain, back pain, RMDI, and EQ-5D that persisted in follow-up. Between group differences were not significant for any outcomes. During 6-month follow-up, 71% (17 of 24) of patients receiving oxygen-ozone, avoided microdiscectomy. The mean procedure time for oxygen-ozone was significantly faster than microdiscectomy by 58 minutes (p<.0010) and the mean discharge time from procedure was significantly shorter for the oxygen-ozone procedure (4.3±2.9 hours vs. 44.2±29.9 hours, p<.001). No major adverse events occurred in either treatment group., Conclusions: Intradiscal oxygen-ozone chemonucleolysis for single-level lumbar disc herniations unresponsive to medical management, met the non-inferiority criteria to microdiscectomy on 6-month mean leg pain improvement. Both treatment groups achieved similar rapid significant clinical improvements that persisted and overall, 71% undergoing intradiscal oxygen-ozone were able to avoid surgery., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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7. Evolving role of minimally invasive techniques in the management of symptomatic bone metastases.
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Benhabib H, Meirovich H, and David E
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- Humans, Pain, Pain Management, Quality of Life, Radiofrequency Ablation, Spinal Neoplasms
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: Bone metastases are responsible for considerable morbidity, which can significantly limit a patient's quality of life. This article aims to review minimally invasive, image-guided locoregional treatments for symptomatic bone metastases as an adjunct to conventional treatment modalities., Recent Findings: Conservative therapy and radiation therapy (RT) can be effective at addressing pain, however, they require time to achieve optimal efficacy and do not address the instability and progressive collapse of pathological fractures. Vertebral and pelvic augmentation with cement enhances structural stability and can prevent progressive collapse and deformity. Ablative therapies, including radiofrequency ablation (RFA), cryoablation, and photodynamic therapy (PDT), induce cellular destruction of tumor tissue. RFA and PDT can be combined with cement augmentation in a single sitting., Summary: Minimally invasive image-guided treatments can provide rapid pain relief, enhance mechanical stability, and improve quality of life. These treatments are associated with low complication rates and are suitable for frail patients. They can be used as companion procedures to conventional treatments, or function as an alternative for patients with radioresistant biologies or those with dose limitations from prior RT sessions., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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8. Carotid near-occlusion can be identified with ultrasound by low flow velocity distal to the stenosis.
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Johansson E, Benhabib H, Herod W, Hopyan J, Machnowska M, Maggisano R, Aviv R, and Fox AJ
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- Aged, Computed Tomography Angiography, Contrast Media, Female, Humans, Iohexol, Male, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Blood Flow Velocity, Carotid Stenosis diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: Most carotid near-occlusions are indistinguishable from conventional ≥ 50% stenosis on ultrasound, demonstrating high peak systolic velocity (PSV) in the stenosis., Purpose: To study whether the velocity distal to the stenosis can separate high PSV near-occlusion from conventional ≥ 50% stenosis., Material and Methods: We included patients with ≥ 50% carotid stenosis with high PSV (≥125 cm/s), examined with both computed tomography angiography (CTA) and ultrasound within 30 days, and a distal velocity measurement was performed. Based on CTA, cases were divided into three groups: conventional stenosis; near-occlusion without full collapse (NwoC; normal-appearing albeit small distal artery); and near-occlusion with full collapse (NwC; threadlike distal artery). Distal Doppler ultrasound flow velocities were compared between these groups., Results: Sixty patients were included: 33 patients with conventional stenosis; 20 patients with NwoC; and seven patients with NwC. Mean distal PSV was 93, 63, and 21 cm/s ( P < 0.001) and mean distal end-diastolic velocity was 30, 24, and 5 cm/s ( P < 0.001), respectively. A distal PSV < 50 cm/s was 63% sensitive and 94% specific for separating both types of near-occlusion from conventional stenosis., Conclusion: In high PSV carotid stenoses, the distal velocity was lower in near-occlusions than conventional carotid stenosis. Distal velocities warrant further investigation in diagnostic studies.
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- 2019
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9. Carotid near-occlusion frequently has high peak systolic velocity on Doppler ultrasound.
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Khangure SR, Benhabib H, Machnowska M, Fox AJ, Grönlund C, Herod W, Maggisano R, Sjöberg A, Wester P, Hojjat SP, Hopyan J, Aviv RI, and Johansson E
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Blood Flow Velocity, Canada, Computed Tomography Angiography, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted, Male, Middle Aged, Sensitivity and Specificity, Sweden, Carotid Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Ultrasonography, Doppler methods
- Abstract
Purpose: Carotid near-occlusion is a tight atherosclerotic stenosis of the internal carotid artery (ICA) resulting in decrease in diameter of the vessel lumen distal to the stenosis. Near-occlusions can be classified as with or without full collapse, and may have high peak systolic velocity (PSV) across the stenosis, mimicking conventional > 50% carotid artery stenosis. We aimed to determine how frequently near-occlusions have high PSV in the stenosis and determine how accurately carotid Doppler ultrasound can distinguish high-velocity near-occlusion from conventional stenosis., Methods: Included patients had near-occlusion or conventional stenosis with carotid ultrasound and CT angiogram (CTA) performed within 30 days of each other. CTA examinations were analyzed by two blinded expert readers. Velocities in the internal and common carotid arteries were recorded. Mean velocity, pulsatility index, and ratios were calculated, giving 12 Doppler parameters for analysis., Results: Of 136 patients, 82 had conventional stenosis and 54 had near-occlusion on CTA. Of near-occlusions, 40 (74%) had high PSV (≥ 125 cm/s) across the stenosis. Ten Doppler parameters significantly differed between conventional stenosis and high-velocity near-occlusion groups. However, no parameter was highly sensitive and specific to separate the groups., Conclusion: Near-occlusions frequently have high PSV across the stenosis, particularly those without full collapse. Carotid Doppler ultrasound does not seem able to distinguish conventional stenosis from high-velocity near-occlusion. These findings question the use of ultrasound alone for preoperative imaging evaluation.
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- 2018
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10. Normal appearing white matter permeability: a marker of inflammation and information processing speed deficit among relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis patients.
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Eftekhari E, Hojjat SP, Vitorino R, Carroll TJ, Cantrell CG, Lee L, Taylor MW, Morrow SA, Benhabib H, Aviv RI, and Kassner A
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- Blood-Brain Barrier, Disability Evaluation, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Cognition Disorders pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting diagnostic imaging, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting pathology, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: Blood-brain barrier breakdown (BBBB) occurs in relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Relative recirculation (rR), a BBBB surrogate, may show inflammation undetectable by gadolinium. We compared normal appearing white matter (NAWM) rR in patients with and without disability measured with Symbol Digit Modalities Test and the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS)., Methods: Thirty-nine RRMS patients were prospectively recruited and classified as impaired or non-impaired based on the SDMT and EDSS threshold ≥3. Significant demographic, MRI structural and regional rR characteristics were advanced into multivariate analysis to assess the association with impairment of cognition and EDSS. Bonferroni corrected p < 0.025 was applied to demographic and rR group comparisons; p < 0.05 was used in the final multivariate logistic regression., Results: rR was higher in NAWM (p = 0.012), NAGM (p = 0.004), and basal ganglia (p = 0.007) in cognitively impaired versus non-impaired patients. The difference between NAWM and T2HL rR was significant in cognitively non-impaired patients and approximated that of T2HL in impairment (0.084 vs. 0.075, p = 0.008; 0.118 vs. 0.101, p = 0.091, respectively). After adjusting for confounders, rR elevation for NAWM (OR 1.777; 95% CI 1.068-2.956; p = 0.026), NAGM (OR 2.138; 1.100-4.157; p = 0.025), and basal ganglia (OR 2.192; 1.120-4.289; p = 0.022) remained significantly predictive of cognitive impairment. NAWM area under the curve (AUC) for cognitive impairment was 0.783. No significant group differences or associations were seen for rR and EDSS impairment. No NAGM and cortical lesion rR difference was present within any of the impaired or non-impaired groups., Conclusion: rR elevation in NAWM, NAGM, and basal ganglia appears sensitive to cognitive impairment but not EDSS.
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- 2017
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11. Responsiveness of the QUALID to Improved Neuropsychiatric Symptoms in Patients with Alzheimer's Disease.
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Benhabib H, Lanctôt KL, Eryavec GM, Li A, and Herrmann N
- Abstract
Background: This study aimed to determine whether the Quality of Life in Late-Stage Dementia (QUALID) scale is responsive to changes in behaviour due to therapeutic intervention., Method: 31 long-term care residents with moderate to severe AD and agitation/aggression entered a three-month, open-label trial of memantine 10 mg BID. The relationships between the QUALID and BPSD, global improvement, and cognition at baseline and endpoint, as well as the changes in these scales as a result of treatment, were examined., Results: Despite a significant improvement in agitation and aggression (NPI agitation, F3,90 = 3.721, p =.014; CMAI total, F3,90 = 6.301, p =.001) and overall behaviour (NPI total, F3,90 = 4.035, p =.010), there was no significant change in QUALID score (t30 = -0.278, p =.783). The QUALID was correlated with NPI at baseline (τ = 0.270, p =.037) and endpoint (τ = 0.404, p =.002), but change scores were not correlated (τ = 0.107, p =.412)., Conclusion: While the QUALID correlates with behavioural measures at single time points, it does not appear to correlate with changes longitudinally associated with treatment.
- Published
- 2013
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12. Phylogenetic reconstruction of the Legionella pneumophila Philadelphia-1 laboratory strains through comparative genomics.
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Rao C, Benhabib H, and Ensminger AW
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- Legionella pneumophila genetics, Mutation, Polymorphism, Genetic, Genome, Bacterial, Legionella pneumophila classification, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Over 20 years ago, two groups independently domesticated Legionella pneumophila from a clinical isolate of bacteria collected during the first recognized outbreak of Legionnaires' disease (at the 1976 American Legion's convention in Philadelphia). These two laboratory strains, JR32 and Lp01, along with their derivatives, have been disseminated to a number of laboratories around the world and form the cornerstone of much of the research conducted on this important pathogen to date. Nevertheless, no exhaustive examination of the genetic distance between these strains and their clinical progenitor has been performed thus far. Such information is of paramount importance for making sense of several phenotypic differences observed between these strains. As environmental replication of L. pneumophila is thought to exclusively occur within natural protozoan hosts, retrospective analysis of the domestication and axenic culture of the Philadelphia-1 progenitor strain by two independent groups also provides an excellent opportunity to uncover evidence of adaptation to the laboratory environment. To reconstruct the phylogenetic relationships between the common laboratory strains of L. pneumophila Philadelphia-1 and their clinical ancestor, we performed whole-genome Illumina resequencing of the two founders of each laboratory lineage: JR32 and Lp01. As expected from earlier, targeted studies, Lp01 and JR32 contain large deletions in the lvh and tra regions, respectively. By sequencing additional strains derived from Lp01 (Lp02 and Lp03), we retraced the phylogeny of these strains relative to their reported ancestor, thereby reconstructing the evolutionary dynamics of each laboratory lineage from genomic data.
- Published
- 2013
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