Outbreak of group A streptococcus septicemia in children. Clinical, epidemiologic, and microbiological correlates
- PMID: 2061980
Outbreak of group A streptococcus septicemia in children. Clinical, epidemiologic, and microbiological correlates
Abstract
Objective: To determine the epidemiologic, clinical, and microbiological features of group A streptococcus septicemia in children.
Design: A descriptive series of 34 cases over an 11-year period from 1980 through 1990.
Setting: An academically affiliated tertiary-care pediatric hospital, the principal referral center for the state of Colorado and surrounding states.
Participants: Thirty-four patients with positive blood cultures for group A streptococcus (33 medical records were available).
Main outcome measures: Yearly incidence and clinical features of cases; microbiological features of isolated organisms.
Results: There was a significant increase (P = .01) in the incidence of group A streptococcus bacteremia over an 11-year period, with 14 (41%) of these cases occurring in 1989 and 1990. Patients had a rapidly progressing illness, usually without preceding pharyngitis. The prominent M and T types were 1 (4) and 12 (4). Eleven (73%) of the 15 strains produced pyrogenic exotoxin B that significantly correlated with production of proteinase.
Conclusion: There appears to be an increase in group A streptococcus bacteremia in children that is associated with a strain phenotype that suggests a change in organism virulence.
Comment in
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Group A streptococcus septicemia in children.JAMA. 1992 Jan 1;267(1):53. JAMA. 1992. PMID: 1727189 No abstract available.
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