Affiliation:
1. Departments of Laboratory Medicine1 and
2. Internal Medicine,2 National Taiwan University Hospital, and
3. School of Medical Technology,3National Taiwan University College of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
From September 1990 to October 1990, 15 patients who were admitted to four different departments of the National Taiwan University Hospital, including nine patients in the emergency department, three in the hematology/oncology ward, two in the surgical intensive care unit, and one in a pediatric ward, were found to have positive blood (14 patients) or pleural effusion (1 patient) cultures for
Bacillus cereus
. After extensive surveillance cultures, 19 additional isolates of
B. cereus
were recovered from 70% ethyl alcohol that had been used as a skin disinfectant (14 isolates from different locations in the hospital) and from 95% ethyl alcohol (5 isolates from five alcohol tanks in the pharmacy department), and 10 isolates were recovered from 95% ethyl alcohol from the factory which supplied the alcohol to the hospital. In addition to these 44 isolates of
B. cereus
, 12 epidemiologically unrelated
B. cereus
isolates, one
Bacillus sphaericus
isolate from a blood specimen from a patient seen in May 1990, and two
B. sphaericus
isolates from 95% alcohol in the liquor factory were also studied for their microbiological relatedness. Among these isolates, antibiotypes were determined by using the disk diffusion method and the E test, biotypes were created with the results of the Vitek
Bacillus
Biochemical Card test, and random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) patterns were generated by arbitrarily primed PCR. Two clones of the 15
B. cereus
isolates recovered from patients were identified (clone A from 2 patients and clone B from 13 patients), and all 29 isolates of
B. cereus
recovered from 70 or 95% ethyl alcohol in the hospital or in the factory belonged to clone B. The antibiotype and RAPD pattern of the
B. sphaericus
isolate from the patient were different from those of isolates from the factory. Our data show that the pseudoepidemic was caused by a clone (clone B) of
B. cereus
from contaminated 70% ethyl alcohol used in the hospital, which we successfully traced to preexisting contaminated 95% ethyl alcohol from the supplier, and by another clone (clone A) without an identifiable source.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
63 articles.
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