| Literature DB >> 25697304 |
J K Muchowski1, M S Koylass1, A C Dainty1, J A Stack1, L Perrett1, A M Whatmore1, C Perrier1, S Chircop2, N Demicoli2, A B Gatt3, P A Caruana4, K K Gopaul1.
Abstract
Although Malta is historically linked with the zoonosis brucellosis, there had not been a case of the disease in either the human or livestock population for several years. However, in July 2013 a case of human brucellosis was identified on the island. To determine whether this recent case originated in Malta, four isolates from this case were subjected to molecular analysis. Molecular profiles generated using multilocus sequence analysis and multilocus variable number tandem repeat for the recent human case isolates and 11 Brucella melitensis strains of known Maltese origin were compared with others held on in-house and global databases. While the 11 isolates of Maltese origin formed a distinct cluster, the recent human isolation was not associated with these strains but instead clustered with isolates originating from the Horn of Africa. These data was congruent with epidemiological trace-back showed that the individual had travelled to Malta from Eritrea. This work highlights the potential of using molecular typing data to aid in epidemiological trace-back of Brucella isolations and assist in monitoring of the effectiveness of brucellosis control schemes.Entities:
Keywords: Brucella; brucellosis; molecular epidemiology
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25697304 PMCID: PMC9151018 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268814003896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 4.434