2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2012.01.025
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Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) and MRSA (CC398) isolated from post-mortem samples from pigs

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Cited by 24 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Little information is available regarding pigs because Staphylococcus hyicus is the major pathogenic Staphylococcus species in these animals [47], although S. aureus has been isolated occasionally from lesions in pigs [47]. More recent reports, however, show that LA-MRSA CC398 may infect humans and pigs more often than previously thought [48][49][50], but this question needs further study.…”
Section: Cc398mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Little information is available regarding pigs because Staphylococcus hyicus is the major pathogenic Staphylococcus species in these animals [47], although S. aureus has been isolated occasionally from lesions in pigs [47]. More recent reports, however, show that LA-MRSA CC398 may infect humans and pigs more often than previously thought [48][49][50], but this question needs further study.…”
Section: Cc398mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In addition most veterinary laboratories would assume any coagulase-positive staphylococci isolated from pigs were Staphylococcus hyicus and not investigate such isolates any further. However there are now reports of isolation of LA-MRSA from pathological lesions in pigs [66]. Apart from animal to animal spread which is a feature of this strain [67] one of the early features of LA-MRSA was its ready transfer from pigs to humans.…”
Section: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (Mrsa)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the small number of isolates representative of the 1970's, this unique collection contained all the major biotypes described in pigs in the past [1], [2], [5], [35] and all the most common clonal lineages reported in pigs today except ST398 [15], [37], [38]. However, marked phenotypic and genotypic differences were observed between historical and contemporary isolates, indicating that the S. aureus population structure in pigs has undergone major changes over the last 40 years.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The two most common biotypes reported by Devriese in 1984 [2], biotype A (38/68 isolates) and the human ecovar (14/68 isolates), were represented in our historical collection (5/32 and 3/32 isolates, respectively) but were either rare (1/59 isolates belonging to biotype A) or absent (human ecovar) in our contemporary collection. A temporal reduction in the diversity of the porcine S. aureus population could be inferred on the basis of MLST since nine STs found among historical isolates could not be detected among contemporary isolates (Table 1), and are not currently associated with the pig host [15], [37], [38]. The temporal change in population structure was confirmed by spa typing since the spa types displayed by historical isolates are only occasionally reported in pigs today (t008, t012, t1236 and t526) [14], [15], [24], [38][40] or have only been reported in humans (t156 and t213) [41], [42].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%