Affiliation:
1. Departments of Internal Medicine
2. Pediatrics
3. Pathology, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Streptococcus pneumoniae
is a rarely recognized cause of neonatal sepsis. We present a recent case of
S. pneumoniae
bacteremia acquired on the first day of life in a neonate born at 30 weeks of gestation to a mother without prenatal care who had prolonged rupture of the membranes and received intravenous ampicillin prior to delivery. The isolate was resistant to penicillin, with a MIC of the drug of 4 μg/ml. The child responded to a 7-day course of intravenous vancomycin.
S. pneumoniae
was recovered from the vagina of the mother on a swab culture collected prior to delivery, and isolates from mother and child were confirmed to be identical on the basis of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Although neonatal sepsis due to the peripartum transmission of
S. pneumoniae
is rare, this case highlights the concern that increasing efforts to prevent group B streptococcus neonatal disease may lead to an increase in neonatal infections due to resistant organisms.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
24 articles.
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