Author:
BIELASZEWSKA M.,JANDA J.,BLÁHOVÁ K.,MINAŘÍKOVÁ H.,JÍKOVÁ E.,KARMALI M. A.,LAUBOVÁ J.,šIKULOVÁ J.,PRESTON M. A.,KHAKHRIA R.,KARCH H.,KLAZAROVÁ H.,NYČ O.
Abstract
A cluster of four cases of haemolytic uraemic syndrome in children
occurred in Northern
Bohemia, Czech Republic, between 15 June and 7 July, 1995. All the cases
had significantly
elevated titres of anti-O157 lipopolysaccharide (LPS) antibodies as detected
by the indirect
haemagglutination assay. All but one of them had drunk unpasteurized
goat's milk from the
same farm within the week before the disease. Evidence of E. coli
O157 infection was
subsequently found in 5 of 15 regular drinkers of the farm's raw
goat's milk; four of them
were asymptomatic, 1 had mild diarrhoea at the end of June. Verocytotoxin
2-producing E. coli
O157[ratio ]H7 strains of phage type 2 and of identical pulsed-field gel
electrophoresis patterns were
isolated from 1 of 2 farm goats and from 1 of the asymptomatic goat's
milk
drinkers. The
frequency of anti-O157 LPS antibodies found among regular drinkers of the
farm's raw goat's
milk (33%; 5 of 15) was significantly higher than that found in control
population (0%; none
of 45) (P=0·0005; Fisher's exact test). Our findings
indicate that goats may be a reservoir of
E. coli O157[ratio ]H7 and a source of the infection for humans;
raw goat's milk may serve as a vehicle of the pathogen transmission.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
103 articles.
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