Abstract
As a part of an intervention project, all detected carriers of penicillin-resistant pneumococci (PRP) (MIC, ≤0.5 mg/L) in Malmohus County, southern Sweden, were followed by means of weekly nasopharyngeal cultures. The median duration of carriage in 678 individuals was 19 days (range, 3-267 days). The duration of carriage was longest in children <1 year aid (median, 30 days) and shortest in adults >18 years old (median, 14 days). Index cases, whose cultures were performed during an acute infection, were carriers for a mean of 10 days longer than asymptomatic contact cases (P < .05). The PRP spontaneously disappeared from the nasopharynx within 4 weeks in 68%, within 8 weeks in 87%, and within 12 weeks in 94% of the individuals. Other significant risk factors for prolonged carriage were the occurrence of >6 episodes of acute otitis media (AOM) or first episOde of AOM before the age of 1 year (P < .01), the carriage of PRP by other family members (P < .05), and the obtainment of a first positive culture during the winter months (P < .05).
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CITATION STYLE
Ekdahl, K., Ahlinder, I., Hansson, H. B., Melander, E., Mölstad, S., Söderström, M., & Persson, K. (1997). Duration of nasopharyngeal carriage of penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae: Experiences from the South Swedish Pneumococcal Intervention Project. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 25(5), 1113–1117. https://doi.org/10.1086/516103
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