Author:
BESSER T. E.,GOLDOFT M.,PRITCHETT L. C.,KHAKHRIA R.,HANCOCK D. D.,RICE D. H.,GAY J. M.,JOHNSON W.,GAY C. C.
Abstract
Salmonella Typhimurium definitive type 104 with chromosomally encoded resistance to five or
more antimicrobial drugs (R-type ACSSuT+) has been reported increasingly frequently as the
cause of human and animal salmonellosis since 1990. Among animal isolates from the
northwestern United States (NWUS), R-type ACSSuT+ Typhimurium isolates increased
through the early 1990s to comprise 73% of Typhimurium isolates by 1995, but subsequently
decreased to comprise only 30% of isolates during 1998. NWUS S. Typhimurium R-type
ACSSuT+ were consistently (99%) phage typed as DT104 or the closely related DTu302. S.
Typhimurium isolates from cattle with primary salmonellosis, randomly selected from a
national repository, from NWUS were more likely to exhibit R-type ACSSuT+ (19/24, 79%)
compared to isolates from other quadrants (17/71, 24%; P < 0.01). Human patients infected
with R-type ACSSuT+ resided in postal zip code polygons of above average cattle farm
density (P < 0.05), while patients infected with other R-types showed no similar tendency.
Furthermore, humans infected with R-type ACSSuT+ Typhimurium were more likely to
report direct contact with livestock (P < 0.01) than humans infected with other R-types.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
96 articles.
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