Assuntos
Campylobacter fetus , Fezes , Diarreia Infantil , Galinhas , Zoonoses , Métodos Epidemiológicos , Peru , Infecções por CampylobacterRESUMO
Although Campylobacter jejuni is a frequent enteropathogen in cases of paediatric diarrhoea in developing countries, its route of transmission is not well understood. An age-matched, case-control study of children with C. jejuni diarrhoea was therefore carried out in Lima, Peru, from January 1983 to April 1986 to identify the risk factors and vehicles of transmissions. As cases, 104 children less than 3 years of age were selected and compared with controls of the same age with non-gastrointestinal illnesses. Household exposure to live chickens was an important risk factor (odds ratio, 11; after adjusting for socioeconomic and environmental variables). Subjects in index households had a higher frequency of infection than those in control households, and infected young children were more likely to be ill than older children or adults, suggesting that immunity may be acquired from natural infection. The risk factors identified suggest that direct contact with the faeces of C. jejuni-infected chickens in the household environment was largely responsible for transmission of the organism to susceptible infants.
Assuntos
Infecções por Campylobacter/epidemiologia , Galinhas/microbiologia , Diarreia Infantil/etiologia , Zoonoses/epidemiologia , Animais , Infecções por Campylobacter/transmissão , Campylobacter fetus , Pré-Escolar , Exposição Ambiental , Métodos Epidemiológicos , Fezes/microbiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Lactente , Recém-Nascido , Masculino , PeruRESUMO
The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of various antimicrobial drugs, for 667 strains of Salmonella, isolated in three different continents of the world, were determined: 17 antibiotics were tested against 506 randomly selected and 161 chloramphenicol-resistant strains. The activity of the monobactam aztreonam against these organisms was in general equal or superior to that observed with the third-generation cephalosporins, cefotaxime and ceftazidime. Furthermore aztreonam and cefotaxime exhibited uniform and high activity against all the salmonella strains tested, irrespective of their chloramphenicol resistance. Ceftazidime was found to have higher geometric mean MICs only for non-typhi salmonellae from Peru.