Streptococcus canis infections in humans: retrospective study of 54 patients
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_E8B85E8D4EC3
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Streptococcus canis infections in humans: retrospective study of 54 patients
Journal
J Infect
ISSN
1532-2742 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0163-4453
Publication state
Published
Issued date
07/2007
Volume
55
Number
1
Pages
23-6
Language
english
Notes
Galperine, Tatiana
Cazorla, Cecile
Blanchard, Elodie
Boineau, Francoise
Ragnaud, Jean-Marie
Neau, Didier
eng
England
2007/02/27
J Infect. 2007 Jul;55(1):23-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jinf.2006.12.013. Epub 2007 Feb 21.
Cazorla, Cecile
Blanchard, Elodie
Boineau, Francoise
Ragnaud, Jean-Marie
Neau, Didier
eng
England
2007/02/27
J Infect. 2007 Jul;55(1):23-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jinf.2006.12.013. Epub 2007 Feb 21.
Abstract
This 5-year retrospective study reports 54 patients with infection, caused by Streptococcus canis, a pyogenic Lancefield group G streptococcus initially isolated from various animal sources. During 1997-2002, Streptococcus canis accounted for 1% of all streptococci isolated. The clinical signs, outcome and bacteriological characteristics were reviewed. All except eight were symptomatic. Clinical manifestations were: soft tissue infection (n=35), bacteremia (n=5), urinary infection (n=3), bone infection (n=2) and pneumonia (n=1). The course was favorable in 52 cases while two died from sepsis. Cultures were often polymicrobial (n=42, 77.8%) apart from hemocultures. The isolates were sensitive to most antibiotics. Presence of the bacteria did not always signify infection owing to the possible occurrence of colonization. The frequency of S. canis infections is rare and likely underestimated owing to the fact that streptococci are sought only on the basis of the Lancefield classification. The search for S. canis is recommended whenever patients present with symptoms evocative of exposure to a potentially contaminated animal.
Keywords
Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Animals, Bacteremia/epidemiology/microbiology, Child, Dogs/*microbiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Soft Tissue Infections/epidemiology/microbiology/physiopathology, Streptococcal Infections/*epidemiology/microbiology/physiopathology, Streptococcus/*classification/*isolation & purification
Pubmed
Create date
30/01/2023 11:16
Last modification date
31/01/2023 6:55