Title
High frequency of coinfecting enteropathogens in Aeromonas-associated diarrhea of hospitalized peruvian infants
Date Issued
01 January 1991
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Pazzaglia G.
Sack R.B.
Salazar E.
Chea E.
Guerrero C.E.
Palomino J.
The U.S. Naval Medical Research No.2
The U.S. Naval Medical Research No.2
Abstract
Rectal swabs from 391 infants less than 18 months of age who were hospitalized with acute diarrhea and from 138 similarly aged healthy infants were examined for the etiologic agents of diarrhea. Aeromonas spp. were recovered from 205 of 391 (52.4%) diarrheic patients, whereas they were recovered from 12 of 138 (8.7%) controls (P < 10-11). Among the 205 Aeromonas-positive diarrheic patients, 118 (57.6%) were found to be coinfected with other common enteropathogens. Of the 164 Aeromonas-positive initial diarrheic specimens, 82 (50.0%) had one or more other enteropathogens present; 30 patients were coinfected with rotavirus, 20 with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli, 16 with Campylobacter spp., 14 with Shigella spp., 13 with enteropathogenic E. coli, 4 with Vibrio spp., 1 with Salmonella spp., and 1 with Plesiomonas spp. The high frequency of isolation of Aeromonas strains from cases compared with that from controls supports an etiologic role for this organism. However, frequent concomitant infections with other well-recognized enteropathogens and a lack of disease correlation with common Aeromonas phenotypes suggest that only a subset of Aeromonas strains may be diarrhea causing and that such strains may be common to several of the existing species.
Start page
1151
End page
1156
Volume
29
Issue
6
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología celular, Microbiología Virología Pediatría
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0026080176
PubMed ID
Source
Journal of Clinical Microbiology
ISSN of the container
00951137
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus