A
Andrew J. Fox
Researcher at Manchester Royal Infirmary
Publications - 97
Citations - 7911
Andrew J. Fox is an academic researcher from Manchester Royal Infirmary. The author has contributed to research in topics: Campylobacter jejuni & Multilocus sequence typing. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 96 publications receiving 7655 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew J. Fox include Health Protection Agency & University College London.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Molecular epidemiology of Campylobacter jejuni populations in dairy cattle, wildlife, and the environment in a farmland area.
Patrick S. L. Kwan,Mishele Barrigas,F. J. Bolton,Nigel P. French,Peter C Gowland,Richard Kemp,Howard Leatherbarrow,Mathew Upton,Andrew J. Fox +8 more
TL;DR: The segregated distribution of genotypes among samples from different sources suggests that their transmission to humans is perhaps via independent routes, which suggests that both restricted and interconnecting pathways of transmission may be operating in the dairy farmland environment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of sequence variation in meningococcal PorA outer membrane protein on the effectiveness of a hexavalent PorA outer membrane vesicle vaccine.
TL;DR: The killing of this particular serosubtype combination was due mainly to the induction of antibody to the VR2 (P1.10) epitope region, and it was demonstrated that after three or four doses of vaccine there was a significant reduction in the killing of variants P1.5,10.
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Analysis of Recombination in Campylobacter jejuni from MLST Population Data
TL;DR: Recombination in C. jejuni is analyzed using MLST data from isolates taken from wild birds, cattle, wild rabbits, and water in a 100-km2 study region in Cheshire, UK using a recent approximate likelihood method for inference.
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Fatal outcome from meningococcal disease--an association with meningococcal phenotype but not with reduced susceptibility to benzylpenicillin.
Caroline Trotter,Andrew J. Fox,Mary Ramsay,Francesca Sadler,Stephen J. Gray,Richard H. Mallard,Edward B. Kaczmarski +6 more
TL;DR: For this large dataset the serogroup and serotype of the infecting strain influenced mortality from meningococcal disease and may be markers for hypervirulence.
Journal ArticleDOI
Campylobacter jejuni multilocus sequence types in humans, northwest England, 2003-2004.
Will Sopwith,Andrew Birtles,Margaret Matthews,Andrew J. Fox,Steven Gee,Michael Painter,Martyn Regan,Q Syed,Q Syed,Eric Bolton +9 more
TL;DR: MLST can be used to describe and analyze the epidemiology of campylobacteriosis in distinct human populations.