학술논문

Pseudomonas aeruginosa diversity in distinct paediatric patient groups.
Document Type
Article
Source
Clinical Microbiology & Infection. Oct2008, Vol. 14 Issue 10, p935-941. 7p. 1 Black and White Photograph, 2 Charts.
Subject
*PSEUDOMONAS aeruginosa
*JUVENILE diseases
*PEDIATRICS
*GEL electrophoresis
*ELECTROPHORESIS
*HOSPITAL care
*CYSTIC fibrosis
*GENETIC disorders
*LUNG diseases
*PANCREATIC diseases
*COMMUNICABLE diseases
Language
ISSN
1198-743X
Abstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a pathogen that often infects patients who are either immunocompromised or have local defects in host defences. It is known that cystic fibrosis (CF) patients are sometimes infected with certain clonal isolates. It is not clear whether these clonal isolates also infect non-CF patients and whether clonality of isolates occurs in other patient groups. The aim of this study was to investigate P. aeruginosa diversity and the occurrence of clones within five distinct paediatric patient groups susceptible to P. aeruginosa infection. P. aeruginosa isolates were cultured from 157 patients (CF first infection (CF-1 group) (29); CF chronic infection (CF-chronic group) (27); urinary tract infection (34); chronic suppurative otitis media (43); and intensive-care hospitalization/immunodeficiency (24)). All 202 phenotypically different isolates were tested for antimicrobial resistance and further typed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Simpson’s diversity index was calculated for the five groups. CF-chronic patients carried the highest number of distinct P. aeruginosa phenotypes and genotypes per culture. Isolates from the CF-chronic group were significantly less diverse than those from the other groups. A group of clonal isolates was observed among patients from the CF-chronic and CF-1 groups. These or different clonal isolates were not encountered among the three other patient groups. No characteristic resistance pattern could be identified among isolates from the distinct patient groups and among the clonal isolates. In conclusion, isolates of the CF-chronic group were less diverse than those in the other patient groups with P. aeruginosa infection; clonal isolates were not encountered in non-CF patients. Transmission of clonal CF isolates to other patient groups was not observed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]