The colonisation rate of Branhamella catarrhalis in patients from 0 to 45 years of age was examined. Of 561 women admitted to hospital in labour, 6 (1%) carried B. catarrhalis in their throats but none carried the organism in their... more
The colonisation rate of Branhamella catarrhalis in patients from 0 to 45 years of age was examined. Of 561 women admitted to hospital in labour, 6 (1%) carried B. catarrhalis in their throats but none carried the organism in their vaginas. None of 534 newborn babies became colonised at birth or during their 5 days' stay in hospital. Neither were 102 neonates < 1 month of age in hospital colonised. The maximum colonisation rate during childhood was observed in children 1-48 months of age with 143 of 266 (54%) children colonised. Among children 4-15 years of age, four of 57 (7%) children with healthy respiratory tracts were colonised. Significantly more children with upper or lower respiratory tract infections (RTI) were colonised (68%) than were children without such infections (36%), (P < 0.001). After recovery from RTI, the isolation rate in the RTI group fell to that of the non-RTI group. A seasonal variation in prevalence was not observed. Of all the strains of B. catarrhalis isolated, 84% produced beta-lactamase.
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A case history of a 41-year-old woman with bloody diarrhoea is described. A right-sided hemicolectomy was performed and histological findings showed pseudomembranous colitis. The woman was infected with verotoxin-producing E. coli... more
A case history of a 41-year-old woman with bloody diarrhoea is described. A right-sided hemicolectomy was performed and histological findings showed pseudomembranous colitis. The woman was infected with verotoxin-producing E. coli O103:H2. She had taken an overdose of ergotamine and was using a contraceptive containing oestrogen. Each of these have previously been described as being the cause of bloody diarrhoea, but we suggest the combination as the aetiology in the present case.
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In 1993, 2 cases of urinary tract infection (UTI) caused by verotoxin-producing Escherichia coli were diagnosed at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen, Denmark. Neither of the patients had any previous history of diarrhea. We suggest that E.... more
In 1993, 2 cases of urinary tract infection (UTI) caused by verotoxin-producing Escherichia coli were diagnosed at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen, Denmark. Neither of the patients had any previous history of diarrhea. We suggest that E. coli strains isolated from UTI be examined for the production of verotoxin when hemolytic uremic syndrome is clinically suspected.
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The plasmid-mediated colistin resistance gene, mcr-1, was detected in an Escherichia coli isolate from a Danish patient with bloodstream infection and in five E. coli isolates from imported chicken meat. One isolate from chicken meat... more
The plasmid-mediated colistin resistance gene, mcr-1, was detected in an Escherichia coli isolate from a Danish patient with bloodstream infection and in five E. coli isolates from imported chicken meat. One isolate from chicken meat belonged to the epidemic spreading sequence type ST131. In addition to IncI2*, an incX4 replicon was found to be linked to mcr-1. This report follows a recent detection of mcr-1 in E. coli from animals, food and humans in China.
433 episodes of E. coli bactereaemia over a 5-year period in a Danish university hospital were studied with special emphasis on possible differences between nosocomial (NO) and community-acquired (CA) cases. Data from 186 males and 247... more
433 episodes of E. coli bactereaemia over a 5-year period in a Danish university hospital were studied with special emphasis on possible differences between nosocomial (NO) and community-acquired (CA) cases. Data from 186 males and 247 females with ages ranging from 9 days to 94 years were recorded. The average incidence of E. coli bacteraemia was 24.4 episodes/10,000 admissions/year. Older females accounted for the largest number of cases, which reflected the composition of the background population. The highest risk of infection was in males 80-89 years of age. The highest frequency of NO infections was in the departments of Intensive Care (90%) Orthopaedic Surgery (87%) and Haematology (80%). The most common focus was the urinary tract, with 72% of the episodes with a known focus, while the biliary tract was the focus in 14%. NO bacteraemia was independently related to immunosuppressive therapy, presence of predisposing factors, polymicrobial bacteraemia and presence of a non-urinary tract focus. A urinary tract focus was associated with CA bacteraemia, monomicrobial infection, female sex and a normal or elevated total white blood cell count. Patients with NO bacteraemia had predisposing factors more often than had CA patients, especially haematological malignancies and immunosuppressive therapy. Lack of a known bacterial focus was more common in NO than CA episodes, particularly among patients with haematologic malignancies. The overall mortality was 21%. Increased mortality was independently related to leukopenia (45%), immunosuppressive therapy and NO bacteraemia.
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Treatment Outcome, Infectious Diseases, Adolescent, Denmark, Humans, and 18 moreChild, Escherichia coli, Female, Male, Infant, Incidence, Risk factors, Clinical Sciences, Newborn Infant, Aged, Middle Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Adult, Retrospective Studies, Bacteremia, Risk Factors, Cross-infection, and Escherichia Coli Infections
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We report an outbreak of Clostridium difficile PCR ribotype 027 in Denmark. The outbreak includes to date 73 cases from the area north of Copenhagen, but there may be related cases elsewhere in Zealand. Most infections are... more
We report an outbreak of Clostridium difficile PCR ribotype 027 in Denmark. The outbreak includes to date 73 cases from the area north of Copenhagen, but there may be related cases elsewhere in Zealand. Most infections are healthcare-associated and in patients who previously received antibiotic treatment. The strain is resistant to moxifloxacin, erythromycin, and clindamycin, and carries genes for toxin A, toxin B, and for the binary toxin. The antimicrobial pattern differs from that of the strain involved in a small cluster in Denmark in 2006-2007. Because of this outbreak, hygienic measures in the involved hospitals have been reinforced. Nationwide, microbiological laboratories were alerted to the outbreak and encouraged to send isolates for toxin profiling and PCR ribotyping.
Few studies have investigated the potential contamination of splash basins and they have shown very divergent results: contamination ranging from 2.13% to 74% has been reported. This study set out to examine if splash basins used in a... more
Few studies have investigated the potential contamination of splash basins and they have shown very divergent results: contamination ranging from 2.13% to 74% has been reported. This study set out to examine if splash basins used in a laminar air flow (LAF) environment during elective knee and hip arthroplasty constitute an unnecessary risk. Of the 49 cases sampled two cultures were positive (4%; 95% confidence interval = 0.49-13.9). We conclude that splash basins do get contaminated even in an LAF environment. Further studies with larger populations are needed to validate our findings.
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Infection following arthroplasty is a very serious complication as it has major impact on morbidity and mortality. This study set out to examine if leaving the instruments on the trolley would result in contamination from airborne... more
Infection following arthroplasty is a very serious complication as it has major impact on morbidity and mortality. This study set out to examine if leaving the instruments on the trolley would result in contamination from airborne pathogens during elective hip and knee arthroplasty. We conclude that instruments placed in a laminar airflow field do get contaminated, but further studies with a larger sample size are needed to verify the results.
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Research Interests:
433 episodes of E. coli bactereaemia over a 5-year period in a Danish university hospital were studied with special emphasis on possible differences between nosocomial (NO) and community-acquired (CA) cases. Data from 186 males and 247... more
433 episodes of E. coli bactereaemia over a 5-year period in a Danish university hospital were studied with special emphasis on possible differences between nosocomial (NO) and community-acquired (CA) cases. Data from 186 males and 247 females with ages ranging from 9 days to 94 years were recorded. The average incidence of E. coli bacteraemia was 24.4 episodes/10,000 admissions/year. Older females accounted for the largest number of cases, which reflected the composition of the background population. The highest risk of infection was in males 80-89 years of age. The highest frequency of NO infections was in the departments of Intensive Care (90%) Orthopaedic Surgery (87%) and Haematology (80%). The most common focus was the urinary tract, with 72% of the episodes with a known focus, while the biliary tract was the focus in 14%. NO bacteraemia was independently related to immunosuppressive therapy, presence of predisposing factors, polymicrobial bacteraemia and presence of a non-urinary tract focus. A urinary tract focus was associated with CA bacteraemia, monomicrobial infection, female sex and a normal or elevated total white blood cell count. Patients with NO bacteraemia had predisposing factors more often than had CA patients, especially haematological malignancies and immunosuppressive therapy. Lack of a known bacterial focus was more common in NO than CA episodes, particularly among patients with haematologic malignancies. The overall mortality was 21%. Increased mortality was independently related to leukopenia (45%), immunosuppressive therapy and NO bacteraemia.
Research Interests:
Treatment Outcome, Infectious Diseases, Adolescent, Denmark, Humans, and 19 moreChild, Escherichia coli, Female, Male, Infant, Incidence, Risk factors, Infectious, Clinical Sciences, Newborn Infant, Aged, Middle Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Adult, Retrospective Studies, Bacteremia, Risk Factors, Cross-infection, and Escherichia Coli Infections
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To examine the therapeutic consequences of diagnostic tests for AIDS-related infections, case records from 33 deceased AIDS patients were reviewed; 23 were autopsied. Determination of serum antibody titres was not important. In... more
To examine the therapeutic consequences of diagnostic tests for AIDS-related infections, case records from 33 deceased AIDS patients were reviewed; 23 were autopsied. Determination of serum antibody titres was not important. In particular, there was no relation between titres and isolation of cytomegalovirus (CMV); isolation attempts or possibly antigen determination would be better. Samples for CMV isolation were obtained from 31 patients; only 7 were negative. Blood, faeces, and particularly sputum cultures gave a low yield; the number of such examinations could be reduced considerably. However, 4/7 disseminated infections with atypical mycobacteria were only revealed at autopsy, despite numerous cultures in vivo. Liver biopsies were not helpful. Diagnostic procedures for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia by lung biopsy caused pneumothorax in 3/15 patients; bronchoalveolar lavage or treatment/prophylaxis without diagnosis could be considered. In 8 autopsies, microscopy was suggestive of cerebral toxoplasmosis, but only 1 patient had presented important clinical symptoms. We suggest a schedule with regular microbiologic and parasitic examinations and few antibody tests, but with more antigen tests.
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A multiresistant, lactose-negative Escherichia coli O78:H10 was isolated from 19 patients in Greater Copenhagen over a period of 8 months. At least 14 cases were community-acquired. 18 isolates originated from urine cultures and 1 from a... more
A multiresistant, lactose-negative Escherichia coli O78:H10 was isolated from 19 patients in Greater Copenhagen over a period of 8 months. At least 14 cases were community-acquired. 18 isolates originated from urine cultures and 1 from a faecal sample. 13 patients were predisposed to urinary tract infection (UTI) and 11 patients showed clinical signs of UTI. This is the first report of E. coli O78:H10 causing human disease. The cluster was probably food-borne, but the source was not identified. This cluster of identical disease associated E. coli was only uncovered because of its multiresistance and lactose-negative phenotype.
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Infectious Diseases, Adolescent, Denmark, Humans, Escherichia coli, and 13 moreFemale, Male, Microbial genetic and drug resistance, Cluster Analysis, Infant, Urinary Tract Infections, Clinical Sciences, Aged, Middle Aged, Adult, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Escherichia Coli Infections, and Serotyping
20 patients were infected with a new group of verocytotoxin-producing E. coli (VTEC) strains of serotype O117:K1:H7 during a 5-y period. The main symptoms were persistent watery diarrhoea with abdominal cramps; 2 persons of the 20 were... more
20 patients were infected with a new group of verocytotoxin-producing E. coli (VTEC) strains of serotype O117:K1:H7 during a 5-y period. The main symptoms were persistent watery diarrhoea with abdominal cramps; 2 persons of the 20 were healthy carriers. The duration of gastrointestinal symptoms in patients was median 11 weeks with 80% being ill for more than 30 d. In 19 cases the infection was acquired during travel (Asia, Africa and Cuba), and 1 case was laboratory acquired. All strains were positive for the vtx1 gene and negative for the vtx2, the eae, the saa and the ehxA genes. 13 strains (65%) were resistant to 4 or more antimicrobial agents. By PFGE using the restriction enzyme XbaI, the strains were clonally related, but not identical. O117:K1:H7 is a clonal group of VTEC that should be considered in patients returning from Africa and Asia with long-lasting watery diarrhoea.
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We compared serotypes, virulence factors and susceptibility to antibiotics of Escherichia coli strains isolated from 282 patients with bacteraemia. Thirty-five of these were neutropenic patients with haematological malignancy and 247 were... more
We compared serotypes, virulence factors and susceptibility to antibiotics of Escherichia coli strains isolated from 282 patients with bacteraemia. Thirty-five of these were neutropenic patients with haematological malignancy and 247 were patients with a normal or raised total white blood cell count and no haematological malignancy. Strains isolated from recurrent bacteraemia were also bio- and ribotyped. Overall, no significant difference was found between O serogroups, K antigens, serum sensitivity, production of haemolysin, expression of P-fimbriae and patterns of antibiotic susceptibility in the two groups of strains. The haematological patients more often than the non-haematological patients had an unknown focus of infection, recurrent bacteraemia, shorter intervals between recurrences and recurrences caused by identical strains. Despite a well-defined focus, six of eight non-haematological patients had recurrences with a strain different from the strain isolated in a previous episode. A possible connection between shorter intervals and recurrence with identical strains is discussed. We suggest that strains from recurrent E. coli bacteraemia are sent to a reference laboratory for serotyping and possibly ribotyping.
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... against 19 antibiotics was performed by agar diffusion technique with Danish blood agar (Statens Seruminstitut) and Neosensitabs (Rosco Diagnostica, Tastrup ... The same conclusion was made by McGowan et al.21 It also indicates that... more
... against 19 antibiotics was performed by agar diffusion technique with Danish blood agar (Statens Seruminstitut) and Neosensitabs (Rosco Diagnostica, Tastrup ... The same conclusion was made by McGowan et al.21 It also indicates that selection for resistance takes place as ...
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Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Survival Analysis, Molecular Epidemiology, Clinical Microbiology, Biological Sciences, Denmark, and 16 morePhylogeny, Disease Outbreaks, Molecular typing, Humans, Child, Escherichia coli, Mice, Animals, Sepsis, Cluster Analysis, Urinary Tract Infections, Newborn Infant, Genotype, Genetic variation, Escherichia Coli Infections, and Serotyping
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Beta-2-microglobulin (B2m) was measured in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum from 18 adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, acute myeloblastic leukemia or lymphoma in order to detect early central nervous system (CNS) involvement... more
Beta-2-microglobulin (B2m) was measured in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum from 18 adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, acute myeloblastic leukemia or lymphoma in order to detect early central nervous system (CNS) involvement or relapse. Six had CNS-involvement documented by neurologic symptoms and tumor cells in the CSF. Their CSF-B2m-concentrations were significantly higher before intrathecal chemotherapy than in those without this complication (P less than 0.01). During therapy CSF-B2m levels fell rapidly to normal values on repeated measurements. The study demonstrates that serial determination of CSF-B2m alone may be a useful and sensitive marker of CNS-dissemination in acute leukemia and malignant lymphoma. Using the criteria of CSF-B2m greater than 160 nmol/l as a positive diagnostic test the sensitivity of the test was 100%, the specificity was 76%. The same values for the CSF/serum-ratio greater than 1 were 75% and 64%, respectively.