Shigella dysenteriae type 1 (Shiga bacillus) has made a dramatic comeback in Bangladesh after 10 years when Shigella flexneri was the dominant serogroup. Whereas S. flexneri showed little increase in ...resistance to the commonly used antimicrobial agents — namely, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) and ampicillin — over the years, S. dysenteriae type 1 underwent rapid changes with regard to sensitivity pattern during the last two years. The first TMP-SMX-resistant strain of S. dysenteriae type 1 was detected in September 1982; however, by mid-1984 most strains were resistant while retaining sensitivity to ampicillin. During this period, the ratio of S. flexneri to S. dysenteriae type 1 narrowed from 0.15 to 1. Such propagation of high resistance to TMP-SMX might have been due to widespread use of the drug imported into the country in large quantities. Resistance to ampicillin is increasing rapidly, particularly in S. dysenteriae type 1.
Entero-invasive Escherichia coli (EIEC) and shigellae were tested for contact-haemolysin (CH) with red blood cells (RBCs) of guinea-pig, rabbit, rat, mouse, monkey, man, sheep and chicken; all ...bacteria showed the best lysis with guinea-pig RBCs. The best culture medium for CH activity of shigellae was tryptic soy broth, and for EIEC it was casamino acid-yeast extract broth with 1 mM CaCl2. CH production by all species was best at the slightly alkaline pH which is optimal for growth; it was also dependent on the presence of a large (140-Mda) plasmid. Pre-treatment of bacteria with homologous antisera inhibited CH activity. Various treatments of bacterial cells and RBCs suggested that CH may be a protein molecule, and that a chitotriose-like moiety may serve as CH receptor. RBCs that were incubated with bacteria at 4 degrees C, or with heat-killed bacteria at 37 degrees C, were not lysed; also, isolated cell-surface components (lipopolysaccharide and outer-membrane protein) did not lyse RBCs. This suggests that metabolically active cells are required for CH activity. Production of CH by both EIEC and shigellae is consistent with a common mechanism for the virulence of these organisms.
Escherichia coli isolates from all surveillance patients less than or equal to 20 months of age seen for diarrhoea at the Dhaka Clinical Treatment Facility of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal ...Disease Research, Bangladesh between March 1 and August 31, 1988, were collected and hybridized with DNA probes to assess the potential importance of diarrhoeagenic E. coli among paediatric patients in Bangladesh. Of 396 patients evaluated, 18% were infected with enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) adherence factor (EAF)-positive E. coli, 23% were infected with enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC), 9% were infected with Shiga-like toxin-positive E. coli, and 13% were infected with diffuse adhesiveness-positive E. coli. None were infected with enteroinvasive E. coli. Ten percent of patients were colonized with more than one type of potential diarrhoeagenic E. coli. The majority of EAF-positive isolates were of traditional EPEC O:H serotypes. Although this was not a case-control study, the large number of EPEC and ETEC, which are recognized enteric pathogens, suggests these organisms are important causes of diarrhoeal diseases in this pediatric population.
A longitudinal study of diarrhea was carried out from May 1988 to April 1989 by household surveillance of 705 children <5 years old in rural Bangladesh. Stool samples were examined for enteric ...pathogens at the beginning of each diarrheal episode. For persistent episodes, stool examination was repeated on days 15–17 of the illness. For each case of persistent diarrhea, stool samples from age-matched acute diarrheal and healthy controls were examined. Compared with healthy controls, cases of diarrhea were associated with Shigella species (P =.07) and rotavirus (P < .05). Diffusely adherent Escherichia coli (P < .05) and cryptosporidia (P = .07) were the only enteropathogens associated with persistent diarrhea in comparison with acute diarrhea. No more than 15% of children had the same class of pathogen identified from stool on both days 1–3 and days 15–17, indicating that persistent infection was uncommon. However, a different enteropathogen was frequently found on days 15–17, suggesting that sequential infection may be a cause of persistent diarrhea.
Shigellosis in Bangladesh: A Reply Shahid, Nigar S.; Haider, Khaleda; Sack, David A. ...
The Journal of infectious diseases,
09/1987, Letnik:
156, Številka:
3
Journal Article