Affiliation:
1. Massachusetts State Laboratory Institute, Boston, Massachusetts
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A 4-year retrospective study showing that we isolated
Bordetella holmesii
, but not
Bordetella pertussis
, from patients with pertussis-like symptoms was performed. From 1995 through 1998, we isolated
B. holmesii
from 32 nasopharyngeal specimens that had been submitted from patients suspected of having pertussis. Previously,
B. holmesii
had been associated mainly with septicemia and was not thought to be associated with respiratory illness. A study was undertaken to describe the characteristics of the
B. holmesii
isolates recovered and why we were successful in detecting the organism in nasopharyngeal specimens.
B. holmesii
isolates were characterized for drug sensitivities and for genetic relatedness by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). These isolates, an additional strain of
B. holmesii
isolated from a blood culture and previously confirmed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga., and 14 other clinical isolates of
Bordetella
spp., including 4 of
B. bronchiseptica
, 5 of
B. parapertussis
, and 5 of
B. pertussis
, were studied. They were all separately inoculated on three Bordet Gengou (BG) selective media containing either 0.625 μg of oxacillin per ml, 40 μg of cephalexin per ml, or 2.5 μg of methicillin per ml, on BG agar with no antibiotic (control), and on charcoal agar (CA) with and without 40 μg of cephalexin per ml. We found that cephalexin, the antibiotic commonly incorporated in both CA and BG agar for the recovery of
Bordetella
spp., is inhibitory to the growth of
B. holmesii
. In addition, the genotypic analysis of the 32
B. holmesii
isolates by PFGE following restriction with
Xba
I and
Spe
I identified the dominant strains circulating during the study period.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
74 articles.
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