Affiliation:
1. Departments of Microbiology1 and
2. Paediatrics,2 University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is the most common gastrointestinal emergency in the neonatal period. Small-bowel overgrowth with aerobic gram-negative bacteria has previously been implicated in the development of NEC. This prospective study performed quantitative bacteriology on 422 duodenal aspirates collected from 122 very-low-birth-weight (<1,500-g) newborns, at the time of routine changing of nasogastric tubes. Isolates of
Enterobacteriaceae
were typed by repetitive extragenic, palindromic PCR and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. One or more samples from 50% of these infants yielded gram-negative bacteria, predominantly
Escherichia coli
,
Klebsiella
spp., and
Enterobacter
spp., with counts up to 10
8
CFU/g. The proportion of samples with gram-negative bacteria increased with postnatal age, while the percentage of sterile samples declined. Molecular typing revealed marked temporal clustering of indistinguishable strains. All infants had been fed prior to isolation of gram-negative organisms. Antibiotic use had no obvious effect on colonization with
Enterobacteriaceae
. There were 15 episodes of suspected NEC (stage I) and 8 confirmed cases of NEC (2 stage II and 6 stage III) during the study period. Duodenal aspirates were collected prior to clinical onset in 13 episodes of NEC. Seven of these yielded
Enterobacteriaceae
, of which five strains were also isolated from infants without NEC. Very-low-birth-weight infants have high levels of duodenal colonization with
Enterobacteriaceae
, with evidence of considerable cross-colonization with indistinguishable strains. There was no association between duodenal colonization with particular strains of
Enterobacteriaceae
and development of NEC.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
68 articles.
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