| Literature DB >> 25531198 |
Christopher F Lowe, Adrienne J Showler, Suzette Perera, Susan McIntyre, Roohi Qureshi, Samir N Patel, Vanessa Allen, H Roslyn Devlin, Matthew P Muller.
Abstract
Brucella melitensis was identified in an aspirate obtained from a patient's hip joint during a procedure at a hospital in Canada. We conducted an investigation into possible exposures among hospital workers; 1 worker who assisted with the procedure tested positive for B. melitensis. Aerosol-generating procedures performed outside the laboratory may facilitate transmission of this bacterium.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25531198 PMCID: PMC4285263 DOI: 10.3201/eid2101.141247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Baseline serologic test results for 32 health care workers exposed to Brucella melitensis, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 2012
| Risk and test result categories | Test results, no. workers (titer, if applicable*) |
|---|---|
| High-risk, radiology, n = 2 | |
| Negative† | 1 |
| Indeterminate | 0 |
| Positive | 1 (1:160) |
| High-risk, laboratory, n = 10 | |
| Negative | 9 |
| Indeterminate | 1 (1:80) |
| Positive | 0 |
| Low-risk, laboratory, n = 20 | |
| Negative | 18 |
| Indeterminate | 1 (1:80) |
| Positive | 0 |
| Refused testing | 1 |
*Negative, ≤1:20; interdeterminate, 1:40–1:80; positive ≥1:160. †Lost to follow-up, but serologic results were negative at 6 weeks after exposure.