The change in resistance of Burkholderia cepacia to ceftazidime and to ciprofloxacin during the exponential phase and up to the onset of stationary phase was assessed along the growth curve in batch culture. B. cepacia was grown in planktonic culture and in a biofilm on a membrane support. Resistance increased progressively during the exponential phase, being increased by ten-fold about every four generations. Bacteria grown in a biofilm were about 15 times more resistant than equivalent planktonic-grown bacteria. The growth rate was not the key factor for the development of resistance. The growth phase and the mode of growth have a fundamental impact on the susceptibility of B. cepacia towards antimicrobial agents. Bacteria growing at the same rate may differ greatly in their resistance to antimicrobial agents.
Tropheryma whipplei is the causative agent of Whipple's disease and has been detected in stools of asymptomatic carriers. Colonization has been associated with precarious hygienic conditions. There is a lack of knowledge about the epidemiology and transmission characteristics on a population level, so the aim of this study was to determine the overall and age-specific prevalence of T. whipplei and to identify risk factors for colonization. This molecular epidemiological survey was designed as a cross-sectional study in a rural community in Central African Gabon and inhabitants of the entire community were invited to participate. Overall prevalence assessed by real-time PCR and sequencing was 19.6% (95% CI 16-23.2%, n=91) in 465 stool samples provided by the study participants. Younger age groups showed a significantly higher prevalence of T. whipplei colonization ranging from 40.0% (95% CI 27.8-52.2) among the 0-4 year olds to 36.4% (95% CI 26.1-46.6) among children aged 5-10 years. Prevalence decreased in older age groups (p<0.001) from 12.6% (95% CI 5.8-19.4%; 11-20 years) to 9.7% (95% CI 5.7-13.6) among those older than 20. Risk factor analysis revealed young age, male sex, and number of people sharing a bed as factors associated with an increased risk for T. whipplei carriage. These results demonstrate that T. whipplei carriage is highly prevalent in this part of Africa. The high prevalence in early life and the analysis of risk factors suggest that transmission may peak during childhood facilitated through close person-to-person contacts.
An in vitro method of growing bacteria as a defined nutrient‐depleted biofilm is proposed. The medium was defined nutritionally in terms of the quantitative composition and by the total amount of nutrient required to achieve a defined population size. Escherichia coli and Burkholderia cepacia were incubated on a filter support placed on a defined volume of solid medium. The change of biomass of the biofilm population was compared with the change in a planktonic culture. The size of the population in stationary phase was proportional to the concentration of limiting substrate up to 40 μmol cm−2 glucose for E. coli and up to 2·7 × 10−9 mol cm−2 iron for B. cepacia. Escherichia coli growing exponentially had a growth rate of μ = 0·30 h−1 in a biofilm and μ = 0·96 h−1 in planktonic culture. The growth rate, μ, for exponentially growing B. cepacia in a biofilm was 1·12 h−1 and in planktonic culture 0·78 h−1. This method allows the limitation of the size of a biofilm population to a chosen value.
Over a period of 6 years 88 children with acute lymphocytic leukemia and malignant non-Hodgkin lymphoma were treated according to the West-Berlin protocol. In 72 children skeletal surveys were performed initially and these showed leukemic bone changes in 31 patients. Follow-up was obtained in 70 patients for up to 8 years after diagnosis: 20 of these patients died and of these 8 showed initial skeletal involvement. In 17 children relapses occurred and 10 of them had bone lesions at first presentation. There was no significant correlation between the extent of the skeletal involvement and the survival time as calculated by life table analysis.
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