Literature DB >> 21073631

Effect of lifestyle factors on Staphylococcus aureus gut colonization in Swedish and Italian infants.

E Lindberg1, I Adlerberth, P Matricardi, C Bonanno, S Tripodi, V Panetta, B Hesselmar, R Saalman, N Aberg, A E Wold.   

Abstract

In recent years, Staphylococcus aureus has become a common bowel colonizer in Swedish infants. We aimed to identify host factors that determine such colonization. Stool samples from 100 Italian and 100 Swedish infants were obtained on seven occasions during the first year of life and cultured quantitatively for S. aureus. In a subgroup of infants in each cohort, individual strains were identified by random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis. Colonization at each time-point was related to delivery mode, siblings in family and antibiotic treatment. In total, 66% of the Italian and 78% of the Swedish infants had S. aureus in their stools on at least one time-point (p 0.08) and 4% of Italian and 27% of Swedish infants were positive on at least six of the seven time-points investigated (p 0.0001). Most infants analysed regarding strain carriage harboured a single strain in their microbiota for several months. The S. aureus stool populations in colonized infants decreased from 10(7) to 10(4) colony-forming units/g between 1 week and 1 year of age in both cohorts. In multivariate analysis, the strongest predictor for S. aureus colonization was being born in Sweden (OR 3.4 at 1 week of age, p 0.002). Having (an) elder sibling(s) increased colonization at peak phase (OR 1.8 at 6 months, p 0.047). Antibiotic treatment was more prevalent among Italian infants and correlated negatively with S. aureus colonization at 6 months of age (OR 0.3, p 0.01). To conclude, S. aureus is a more common gut colonizer in Swedish than Italian infants, a fact that could not be attributed to feeding or delivery mode.
© 2010 The Authors. Clinical Microbiology and Infection © 2010 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21073631     DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-0691.2010.03426.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Microbiol Infect        ISSN: 1198-743X            Impact factor:   8.067


  12 in total

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