Cases reported "Meningitis, Haemophilus"

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1/3. Invasive serotype a Haemophilus influenzae infections with a virulence genotype resembling haemophilus influenzae type b: emerging pathogen in the vaccine era?

    OBJECTIVE: haemophilus influenzae type b causes severe disease in nonimmune infants and young children; other serotypes are uncommon pathogens and thought to have low virulence. Some have hypothesized that with the virtual elimination of H influenzae type b, other serotypes might acquire virulence traits and emerge as important pathogens of children. We describe the clinical, epidemiologic, and molecular biologic features of 5 cases of severe disease attributable to Haemophilus influenzae type a. methods: After observing 4 cases of invasive disease caused by H influenzae type a, we reviewed microbiology records at 3 reference laboratories that perform all serotyping in utah and surveillance databases. Strains of H influenzae type a and control strains were examined by Southern blotting with the use of the cap probe pUO38 and by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. The putative virulence mutation, the IS1016-bexA deletion, was detected by polymerase chain reaction amplification and sequencing. RESULTS: During a 10-month period, we observed 5 children with severe invasive disease caused by H influenzae type a. No isolates of H influenzae type a had been submitted to the reference laboratories between 1992 and 1998. The median age of patients was 12 months (range: 6-48 months). Four of 5 had meningitis and bacteremia; 1 had purpura fulminans. Three isolates, representing 1 of 2 pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns, contained the IS1016-bexA deletion and were associated with particularly severe disease. CONCLUSIONS: We describe an unusual cluster of severe disease caused by H influenzae type a that resembles the clinical and epidemiologic features of H influenzae type b disease. Our data support the hypothesis that the IS1016-bexA deletion may identify more virulent strains of H influenzae. Haemophilus influenzae, epidemiology, virulence, serotyping, pathogenicity.
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keywords = virulence
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2/3. Pathogenicity of a rifampin-resistant cerebrospinal fluid isolate of Haemophilus influenzae type b.

    Two children in a day care facility developed haemophilus influenzae type b meningitis. The second child was enrolled in the facility after rifampin had been administered to the other attendees. The isolate from the first child was susceptible to rifampin, but the isolate from the second was resistant. Both isolates had identical outer membrane protein PAGE profiles. To investigate the virulence of these isolates, we inoculated infant rats intranasally with either the rifampin-resistant or rifampin-susceptible CSF isolate. The rates of nasal colonization (14 of 20 and eight of eight animals inoculated with the rifampin-resistant and rifampin-susceptible isolates, respectively) did not differ significantly. However, bacteremia occurred less frequently in pups inoculated with the rifampin-resistant strain than in animals inoculated with the susceptible strain (four of 20 vs eight of eight, P less than 0.0001). Nasal washings, blood, and CSF obtained from animals inoculated with the rifampin-resistant isolate were divided and plated on media containing rifampin (1 microgram/ml) or without rifampin. Except for those from one animal, organisms isolated from blood and CSF grew only on medium lacking rifampin, whereas H. influenzae type b growing from nasal washings was frequently found on both media. We conclude that mutation of H. influenzae to rifampin resistance is a hazard of rifampin chemoprophylaxis. rifampin-resistant isolates have the potential to cause disease in patients and experimental animals, although they may be relatively less pathogenic than the parent, susceptible organism.
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ranking = 0.125
keywords = virulence
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3/3. meningitis due to enterotoxigenic bacteroides fragilis.

    An enterotoxigenic strain of bacteroides fragilis was the sole organism isolated from the cerebrospinal fluid of a two-and-a-half-month neonate who had a medullary-colonic fistula as part of a complex congenital malformation, but no brain abscess. A rapid latex particle agglutination test for detection of bacterial antigen was positive for haemophilus influenzae type b, suggesting that bacteroides fragilis and haemophilus influenzae type b might share some capsular antigens. In order to determine the role of the enterotoxin with respect to virulence of the strain, antibodies to a 20 kDa protein were sought in the patient's serum, but Western blot of the culture supernatant revealed only antibodies to a 45 kDa bacterial protein. The patient was successfully treated with metronidazole and imipenem.
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ranking = 0.125
keywords = virulence
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