InterhumanTuberculosis Transmission Confirmed by DNA Fingerprinting
Authors:
M. Kubín 1; E. Fridrichovská 1; B. Kozáková 1; J. Zdražílek 1; B. Kreiswirth 2
Authors‘ workplace:
Hygienická stanice hl. m. Prahy, 2 Public Health Research Institute of the Metropolitan City of New York
1
Published in:
Epidemiol. Mikrobiol. Imunol. , 2001, č. 4, s. 157-159
Category:
Overview
By means of fingerprinting based on detection of the insertive sequence IS6110 v DNA of M.tuberculosis predigested by the restrictive enzyme PVUII the authors proved epidemiologicalassociations in three patients with bacillary tuberculosis. The primary source of infection wasa 44-year-old man, alcoholic and homeless suffering from tuberculosis diagnosed during an episodeof ethylic ebriety, discharged prematurely from hospital because of lack of discipline and drunkenness who died after 8 months with a finding of caseous pneumonia. The first contact person wasa 53-year-old women suffering from diabetes and hypertension, an auxiliary worker in the laboratory where she probably was infected during manipulation of the patients infected sputum. Theother patient was a 49-year-old man, alcoholic, unemployed where a symptomatic tuberculousfinding was detected with general weakness, elevated temperatures and expectoration, who mostprobably was infected by a patient during accidental contact in his domicile.The profiles of RFLP strains of M. tuberculosis of all three patients had an identical appearance ofthe DF-1 clone formed by seven copies of IS6110. This profile was not found in any of the total of 98strains of M. tuberculosis examined within the framework of the molecular epidemiological prevalence study of patients with bacillary tuberculosis notified in Prague in 1999.
Key words:
Mycobacterium tuberculosis – tuberculosis –fingerprinting DNA-RFLP.
Labels
Hygiene and epidemiology Medical virology Clinical microbiologyArticle was published in
Epidemiology, Microbiology, Immunology
2001 Issue 4
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