We performed a retrospective analysis of clinical and laboratory data over 5 years in a tertiary centre to assess clinical and microbiological characteristics of patients with Raoultella spp. infection. Raoultella spp. were deemed responsible for clinical infections in 57 patients (R. planticola, n = 32 and R. ornithinolytica, n = 25). The most prevalent diagnoses for R. planticola were cystitis (50%; n = 16) followed by bacteraemia and pneumonia (9.4%; n = 3); for R. ornithinolytica, cystitis (36%; n = 9) followed by pneumonia (24%; n = 6). Immunodeficiency was present in 18 patients (56.3%) with R. planticola and in 16 patients (64%) with R. ornithinolytica infection. Of these, 55.6% and 37.5% had diabetes and 27.8% and 18.% were solid organ transplant recipients, respectively. All isolates were sensitive to third-generation cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones and aminoglycosides. Mortality of infections with R. planticola (n = 5; 15.6%) was higher than for R. ornithinolytica (n = 2; 8.0%), but the difference was not statistically significant.
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has been endemic in Hospital de Santa Maria, a 1,300-bed teaching hospital in Lisbon, Portugal, since the mid-1980s with a prevalence of 30% in 1993. A total of 54 MRSA and 93 methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA) isolates recovered during the first 3 months of 1993 were analyzed for the particular mecA polymorphs and Tn554 attachment sites (in the case of MRSA) and for pulsed-field gel electrophoretic patterns. While all MRSA isolates shared a very similar multidrug resistance antibiogram, molecular methods allowed the identification of an unusually large number of genetic backgrounds (24 different pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns in 54 isolates) and three different mecA polymorphs among the MRSA strains. Similar large variation in the genetic backgrounds of MSSA was observed. The most frequent mecA polymorph (mecA type I) was found in association with three different Tn554 patterns. Among the MRSA strains of Hospital Santa Maria, we found two clonal types previously described in Portugal: one corresponding to the dominant clone in an MRSA outbreak at the pediatric ward of the Lisbon Hospital Dona Estefânia and another one identical to the Iberian epidemic clone identified in several Portuguese hospitals and in MRSA outbreaks in Barcelona and Madrid. This suggests that MRSA clones of Hospital de Santa Maria may have been a reservoir for staphylococcal strains over the past decade.
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