H
Harry Daugharty
Researcher at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Publications - 12
Citations - 423
Harry Daugharty is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Complement fixation test & Radioimmunoassay. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 12 publications receiving 415 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Application of a Nested, Multiplex PCR to Psittacosis Outbreaks
TL;DR: A nested, multiplex PCR for simultaneous detection of three species of chlamydiae in human and avian specimens was developed and used to infer that C. psittaci had been transmitted from birds purchased in pet stores to humans.
Journal ArticleDOI
Morphologic and staining characteristics of a cyanobacterium-like organism associated with diarrhea.
Earl G. Long,Elizabeth White,Wayne W. Carmichael,Patricia M. Quinlisk,Ramachandran Raja,Billie L. Swisher,Harry Daugharty,Milton T. Cohen +7 more
TL;DR: A spherical organism 9-10 microns in diameter, seen in three outbreaks of diarrhea in Southeast Asia and the United States during the past 2 years, bore characteristics of a cyanobacterium when observed in formalin-preserved stool specimens and by electron microscopy.
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Vaginal transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) to a chimpanzee.
Patricia N. Fultz,Harold M. McClure,Harry Daugharty,Anne R. Brodie,Cornelia R. McGrath,Brent Swenson,Donald P. Francis +6 more
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Solid-Phase Radioimmunoassay of Total and Influenza-Specific Immunoglobulin G
TL;DR: Results of solid-phase radioimmunoassay for influenza antibody correlate well with hemagglutinin antibody titers but not with complement-fixing antibodies titers, and the simplicity, reproducibility, and versatility of the solid- phase procedure make it diagnostically useful.
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Utility of complement fixation and microimmunofluorescence assays for detecting serologic responses in patients with clinically diagnosed psittacosis
TL;DR: The serodiagnosis of human psittacosis was considerably improved by a microimmunofluorescence (MIF) assay that uses selected strains of Chlamydia psittaci, C. pneumoniae, and C. trachomatis as antigens to detect serologic responses to chlamydial species.