An increase in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections prompted a study of MRSA during a 21-month period in a 600-bed university hospital in southern Texas. MRSA cases were classified as community, nosocomial, or transfer cases. A case-control study of risk factors for community MRSA compared with community methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA) was performed. Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of whole cell DNA typing was used as a marker of strain identity for 31 consecutive isolates collected during the last 8 months of the study. During the 21 months there were 170 patients with MRSA infection or colonization, an incidence of 0.2 per 1,000 patient-days. Ninety-nine (58%) of 170 isolates were from community cases; the community to nosocomial case ratio was 2:1. No significant risk factors differentiated patients with community MRSA compared with community MSSA. Most community MRSA isolates studied (15 [68%] of 22) had distinct PFGE patterns, as did many nosocomial MRSA isolates (4 [44%] of 9). MRSA isolates were commonly present on admission to the hospital, and multiple MRSA strains were demonstrated among both community and hospital isolates.
Syphilis infection was associated with a decrease in the CD4 cell count and an increase in the HIV VL in almost one third of the patients. In this series, more than two thirds of the syphilis cases were diagnosed in patients who were previously known to be infected with HIV.
During a 19-month period from April 1993 to October 1994, 41 isolates of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREF) were detected in seven different hospitals in a city in southern Texas. A case-control study to determine the risk factors for acquisition was done in the hospital in which the majority of isolates were detected. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of whole-cell DNA was used to determine strain identity. Thirty-five (85%) of the 41 VREF isolates were of the vanB phenotype. Of these, 32 (91%) of 35 were the same strain by PFGE typing. The same vanB strain was documented in five different hospitals in the city. In contrast, 4 (67%) of 6 of the vanA phenotype VREF isolates were distinct strains by PFGE typing. Significant risk factors for colonization or infection with VREF were prior exposure to antibiotics (P = .04), the previous use of third-generation cephalosporins (P = .03), and the previous use of parenteral vancomycin (P = .002). Infection-control and antibiotic-utilization measures were implemented to control cross-transmission and selection of VREF isolates. During the emergence of VREF in our city, clonal dissemination of a single strain of vanB VREF among six hospitals was documented. Limited cross-transmission of vanA phenotype VREF isolates occurred, but most vanA VREF isolates were distinct strains selected in individual hospital environments.
One of the most essential systems applied to the eradication of bovine tuberculosis by Mycobacterium bovis is the epidemiologic surveillance of animals slaughtered in abattoir by means of inspection and sample taking of lesions compatible with tuberculosis, confirming the existence of the disease through culture and molecular detection, which takes weeks before a result can be obtained. An interesting alternative is to develop high-throughput molecular systems for the direct detection of M. bovis on biological samples. In this sense, our research has developed a molecular detection system by means of a real time based PCR process which is applied directly to bovine biological samples and it allows to differentiate between Mycobacterium tuberculosis Complex, Mycobacterium avium Complex and other atypical mycobacteria that are interesting from the veterinary point of view. The sensitivity was analyzed by applying a conventional extraction system based on guanidine thiocyanate and a robotized system based on the selective magnetic capture of mycobacterial DNA. The molecular detection system showed a high specificity and a detection threshold of only 2-3 genomes. The sensitivity depended on the DNA extraction system being used and on the kind of lesions on which it was used; the sensitivity ranged from 61.11% for samples with non visible lesions to 80.64% for chronic lesions, with an average sensitivity of 73.87% when using the manual extraction system and between 27.77 and 74.19% (average sensitivity 47.74%) when using the automated robotic system. In conclusion, our multiplex real time PCR assay represents a fully controlled, highthroughput diagnostic tool for the rapid detection of Myobacterium presence directly in animal clinical specimens, which could be a practical tool in the context of bovine tuberculosis abattoir surveillance programs and granuloma submission programs.
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