Author:
ADLERBERTH I.,JALIL F.,CARLSSON B.,MELLANDER L.,HANSON L. Å.,LARSSON P.,KHALIL K.,WOLD A. E.
Abstract
The Escherichia coli flora of infants in developed countries
is dominated by one or a few
strains which persist for prolonged periods of time, but no longitudinal
studies have been
performed in developing countries. To this end, we studied the rectal enterobacterial
flora in 22
home-delivered Pakistani infants during their first 6 months of life. Three
colonies were
isolated and species typed on each of 11 sampling occasions. E. coli
isolates were strain typed
using electromorphic typing of cytoplasmic enzymes, and their O serogroups
were determined.
There was a very rapid turnover of enterobacterial strains in the rectal
flora of individual
infants. On average, 8·5 different E. coli strains were
found per infant, and several biotypes of
other enterobacteria. Less than 50% of the infants were colonized with
E. coli from their
mothers, but strains of maternal origin were four times more likely to
persists in the infants'
flora than other E. coli strains. Enterobacteria other than E.
coli were always of non-maternal
origin, and Enterobacter cloacae and Klebsiella pneumoniae
biotypes recovered from
contaminated feeds were later identified in the infants' rectal flora.
An early colonization with
klebsiella or enterobacter was significantly associated with diarrhoea
during the neonatal
period, although these bacteria were not likely to be the cause of the
disease. The results
suggest that poor hygienic conditions result in an unstable and diverse
enterobacterial flora,
which may influence infant health.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
81 articles.
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