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Comparative Study
. 1996 Mar;1(1):34-42.
doi: 10.1111/j.1523-5378.1996.tb00006.x.

Natural and experimental Helicobacter mustelae reinfection following successful antimicrobial eradication in ferrets

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Natural and experimental Helicobacter mustelae reinfection following successful antimicrobial eradication in ferrets

M Batchelder et al. Helicobacter. 1996 Mar.

Abstract

Background: Recrudescence or reinfection may occur after eradication of Helicobacter pylori in humans.

Materials and methods: We used the ferret Helicobacter mustelae model to investigate the effect of prior infection and eradication on reinfection by experimental and natural routes. Two groups of ferrets with naturally acquired H. mustelae infection were treated with an eradication protocol using amoxicillin, metronidazole, and bismuth subsalicylate. The ferrets were monitored for recrudescence by repeated cultures of endoscopic gastric mucosal biopsies. The ferrets were challenged at 17 months (group I) and 6 months (group II) after eradication with a strain of H. mustelae having a distinctive restriction endonuclease analysis pattern. The eradication protocol was repeated to eliminate the infection produced by experimental challenge. The ferrets were then cohoused intermittently with naturally infected ferrets.

Results: The original H. mustelae infection was successfully eliminated by the eradication protocol. No recrudescence was observed in group I for 12 months nor for 3 months in group II after eradication. All ferrets became persistently reinfected with the challenge strain. The infection from the challenge strain was eradicated successfully. No ferrets in group I and all ferrets in group II became infected through cohousing.

Conclusions: These results suggest that though prior infection with H. mustelae may confer some protection against reinfection, such protection is not universal in all circumstances; that susceptibility to reinfection by contact with infected animals varies between individuals; and that age may be a factor in this individual variability. These results are applicable to studies of reinfection after eradication of H. pylori in humans.

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