Verônica Viana Vieira, Juliana Nunes Ramos, Louisy Sanches dos Santos, Ana Luíza Mattos-Guaraldi
2. Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma
Ken B. Waites, Li Xiao, Rose M. Viscardi, Sixto M. Leal Jr. and John I. Glass
3. Neisseria meningitidis
C. R. Robert George, Helen Smith and Monica M. Lahra
4. Non-Tuberculous Mycobacteria
Emilyn Costa Conceição, Maria Cristina S. Lourenço, Rafael Silva Duarte and Philip Noel Suffys
5. Oral Streptococci
Marlise I. Klein
6. Streptococcus pneumoniae
Felipe P. G. Neves and Tatiana C. A. Pinto
7. Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Raphael Cavalcante de Medeiros, Sergio Eduardo Longo Fracalanzza and Raquel Regina Bonelli
8. Streptococcus agalactiae (Group B Streptococcus)
Sarah Shabayek
9. Treponema
Mayur Shukla, Lara Pereira and Allan Pillay
Dr. Ivano de Filippis is a Senior Researcher at Institute for Quality Control of the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (FIOCRUZ) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. His research field focuses on molecular diagnostic and epidemiology of bacterial and viral diseases and antibiotic resistance mechanisms of bacterial pathogens. Dr. de Filippis received his Ph.D. in Cellular and Molecular Biology from FIOCRUZ in 2005 and a postdoctoral degree at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), USA, with a two-years project on molecular epidemiology of meningococci from 2006 to 2008, with Dr. Rebecca D. Prevots and Dr. Margaret C. Bash. He is a permanent professor at the Post-Graduate Program of Health Surveillance at FIOCRUZ, tutoring national and international post-graduation students on several projects on bacterial meningitis, Sexually Transmitted Diseases and Covid-19 among others. Dr. de Filippis is currently the Research Coordinator at the Institute of Quality control at FIOCRUZ. He participate as a Brazilian consultant for the WHO initiative “Defeating Meningitis by 2030” and he holds a patent on rapid methods for bacterial meningitis diagnostic.
This updated second edition of Molecular Typing in Bacterial Infections, presented in two volumes, covers both common and neglected bacterial pathogenic agents, highlighting the most effective methods for their identification and classification in the light of their specific epidemiology. New chapters have been included to add new species, as well as another view of how bacterial typing can be used. These books are valuable resources for the molecular typing of infectious disease agents encountered in both research and hospital clinical laboratory settings, as well as in culture collections and in the industry. Each of the 21 chapters provides an overview of specific molecular approaches to efficiently detect and type different bacterial pathogens. The chapters are grouped in five parts, covering respiratory and urogenital pathogens (Volume I), and gastrointestinal and healthcare-associated pathogens, as well as a new group of vector-borne and Biosafety level 3 pathogens including a description of typing methods used in the traditional microbiology laboratory in comparison to molecular methods of epidemiology (Volume II). Comprehensive and updated, Molecular Typing in Bacterial Infections provides state-of-the-art methods for accurate diagnosis and for the correct classification of different types which will prove to be critical in unravelling the transmission routes of human pathogens.