Abstract
During one year, out of 1829 faecal specimens examined at the Chelmsford Public Health Laboratory, campylobacters were isolated from 109 (6%), 21 of the positive cultures were from hospital in-patients and 3 were from hospital staff. The remaining 85 isolates were from specimens sent in by general practitioners. The authors' figures show a marked season variation with most of the infections occurring from June to September. The highest incidence (36%) was in the 20 to 30 age group, 99% of patients had diarrhoea, usually watery, occasionally explosive, and 9 % had visible blood in their stools. Eighteen per cent. of patients had abdominal pain, 5 of the 21 hospital in-patients underwent abdominal surgery. Fifty-nine faecal specimens were examined microscopically and 30 of these had blood and pus cells or pus cells alone. Three patients had rectal biopsies showing a nonspecific colitis, 11 patients had recently been abroad. © 1980 The Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Bradshaw, M. J., Brown, R., Swallow, J. H., & Rycroft, J. A. (1980). Campylobacter enteritis in Chelmsford. Postgraduate Medical Journal, 56(652), 80–84. https://doi.org/10.1136/pgmj.56.652.80
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