SUMMARY: Streptococcus dysgalactiae subsp. equisimilis (SDSE) isolates with b-hemolysis and carbohydrate groups G or C are increasingly recovered from invasive infections in Japan. The aim of this study was to determine the epidemiological characteristics of SDSE isolates circulating locally among patients with invasive and noninvasive infections. We selected groups G/C b-hemolytic streptococci from a repository at the Clinical Laboratory of Kitasato University Medical Center, from May 2014 through April 2015. Thirteen isolates were identified as SDSE based on the data from API-20 Strep and 16S rRNA sequencing. The samples were from 7 sterile specimens (blood) and 6 non-sterile specimens (pus/sputum/vaginal secretion). Information about the patients with invasive or noninvasive SDSE infections was retrieved from their medical charts. We performed emm genotyping, multilocus sequence typing, a dendrogram analysis of the samples using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and amplifications of the streptococcal inhibitor of a complement-mediated cell lysis-like gene (sicG) and antimicrobial resistance determinants. We identified 8 different emm genotypes, 8 different sequence types, including 4 novel types, 9 different groups in the PFGE dendrogram, the presence or absence of sicG, and 4 different resistance genotypes. Our observations indicate genetic diversity in SDSE isolates from patients with invasive and noninvasive infections in a Japanese university hospital (2014)(2015).
SUMMARY:In the spring of 2015, we experienced a cluster of 4 sporadic cases of yersiniosis in children in Nagano prefecture, a rural area of Japan. Two patients developed appendicitis-like episodes; one had acute gastroenteritis, and the other had bacteremia associated with liver abscess. The causative agent of these infections was Yersinia enterocolitica serogroup O:8. None of the patients had an underlying illness, and all have recovered completely. The patients were neither socially nor geographically related to each other. These 4 consecutive cases suggest that Y. enterocolitica O:8 has spread substantially in the middle part of Japan, and that this virulent strain might be more common than previously reported in our country.
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