| Literature DB >> 23577134 |
Dharanidharan Ramamurthy1, Gururaja P Pazhani, Anirban Sarkar, Ranjan K Nandy, Krishnan Rajendran, Dipika Sur, Bamkesh Manna, Thandavarayan Ramamurthy.
Abstract
A total of 874 fecal specimens (446 diarrheal cases and 428 controls) from diarrheal children admitted in the Infectious Diseases Hospital, Kolkata and age and sex matched asymptomatic subjects from an urban community were assessed for the prevalence of enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis (ETBF). Isolates of B. fragilis were tested for the presence of enterotoxin gene (bft) by PCR. The detection rate of ETBF was 7.2% (63 of 874 specimens) that prevailed equally in diarrheal cases and controls (7.2% each; 32 of 446 cases and 31 of 428 controls). Male children up to one year age group was significantly (p<0.05) associated with ETBF infection as compared to children > 2 years of age in cases and controls. In 25 ETBF isolates, the bft gene was genotyped using PCR-RFLP and only two alleles were identified with prevalence rate of 40% and 60% for bft-1 and bft-3, respectively. All the ETBF isolates were susceptible for chloramphenicol and imipenem but resistant to clindamycin (48%), moxifloxacin (44%) and metronidazole (32%). Resistance of ETBF to moxifloxacin (44%) and metronidazole is an emerging trend. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) revealed that majority of the ETBF isolates are genetically diverse. In the dendrogram analysis, two clusters were identified, one with ETBF resistant to 5-8 antimicrobials and the other cluster with metronidazole and moxifloxacin susceptible isolates from diarrheal cases. To our knowledge, this is the first detailed report on ETBF from India indicating its clinical importance and molecular characteristics.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23577134 PMCID: PMC3618056 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0060622
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Multinomial Logistic Regression Models exploring significant risk age group of ETBF infection.
| Age | B-value | OR 95% CI |
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| Cases | ||||
| Up to 1 year | 0.944 | 2.57 (1.07–6.16) | 0.034 | |
| Male | 1.83 | 6.57 (1.08–39.88) | 0.041 | |
| Female | 1.33 | 3.80 (0.64–22.4) | 0.141 | |
| 1–2 years | 0 | 1.00 (0.35–2.85) | 1 | |
| Male | 0 | 1.00 (0.12–8.54) | 1 | |
| Female | 0 | 1.00 (0.12–8.28) | 1 | |
| >2 years | Reference category | |||
| Controls | ||||
| Up to 1 year | 1.041 | 2.83 (1.12–7.19) | 0.028 | |
| Male | 2.06 | 7.87 (1.1951.97) | 0.032 | |
| Female | 1.77 | 5.91 (0.88–39.43) | 0.067 | |
| 1–2 years | 0.288 | 1.33 (0.46–3.84) | 0.594 | |
| Male | 0.71 | 2.03 (0.24–17.31) | 0.516 | |
| Female | 0.778 | 2.18 (0.25–18.71) | 0.478 | |
| >2 years | Reference category | |||
Statistically significant
Prevalence of ETBF as sole and with other pathogens in children with diarrhea and controls.
| Pathogen | Case (n = 446) | Control (n = 428) |
| ETBF as a sole pathogen |
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| Adenovirus |
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| EAEC |
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| EAEC and Adenovirus |
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| EPEC |
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| EPEC, Adeno virus and |
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| Giardia |
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Figure 1Not1 restriction patterns of genomic DNA of enterotoxigenic B. fragilis isolates.
The dendrogram was generated by using UPGAMA method.
Prevalence of enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis in diarrheal cases and controls in different studies.
| Place | Prevalence of ETBE (%) | Detection method | Remark |
| Reference | |||
| Case | Control | Case | Control | |||||
| Bangladesh | 22 (6.1) n = 358 | 5 (1.2) n = 425 | HT29/C1 assay | p = 0.0001 | ND | ND |
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| Apache and Bangladesh | 44 (4.4) n = 991 | 18 (3.1) n = 581 | HT29/C1 assay | NS | ND | ND | [48] | |
| India | 6 (2.6) n = 226 | 3 (1.7) n = 172 | HT29/C1 assay | NS | ND | ND |
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| Italy | 14 (21.5) n = 65 | 9 (6.9) n = 129 | HT29Cl assay | NS | ND | ND |
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| Bangladesh | 28 (3.5) n = 814 | 12 (1.5) n = 814 | HT29/C1 assay | p = 0.01 | ND | ND |
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| Sweden | 195 (26.8) n = 728 | 24 (12.4) n = 194 | HT29/C1 assay | NS | ND | ND |
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| Brazil | 2 (2.1) n = 96 | 0 n = 74 | HT29/C1 assay | NS | ND | ND |
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| Bangladesh | 40 (2.3) n = 1750 | 15 (0.3) n = 5679 | HT29/C1 assay | p = 0.001 | ND | ND |
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| Vietnam | 43 (7.3) n = 587 | 6 (2.4)n = 249 | Immuno and PCR | p = 0.01 |
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| Turkey | 13 (11.0) n = 117 | 8 (7.8)n = 102 | PCR | p = 0.05 | ND | ND |
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| Turkey | 28 (38.0) n = 73 | 7 (12.0) n = 59 | PCR | p = 0.009 | ND | ND |
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| Turkey | 29 (15.0) n = 200 | 27 (14.0) n = 200 | PCR | NS |
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| Brazil | 9 (8.2) n = 110 | 7 (4.7) n = 150 | Real time PCR | NS |
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Abbreviations: ND, not done; NS, not significant. * Study with colorectal cancer patients