Molecular analysis of pathogens of upper respiratory tract infections in children--a study of nasopharyngeal S. pneumoniae and PBP genes in acute otitis media

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Abstract

We have recently been confronted with refractory upper respiratory infections with an increasing prevalence of penicillin (Pc)-resistant S. pneumoniae. There has been a broad consensus that acute otitis media (AOM) is caused by migration of pathogens from nasopharynx and proliferation in the middle ear space, and thus it is, very important to study the bacterial environment in the nasopharynx as the source of middle ear infections. Eighty pneumococcal isolates from the nasopharynx of children with acute otitis media were evaluated by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for mutation of Pc-binding protein (PBP) genes. The results showed mutation of all three PBP genes, pbp 1a, pbp 2x, and pbp 2b, in 30% of the isolates, while 74% were found to possess various PBP gene mutations, mostly in one-year-old children. Of the 46 isolates whose minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of Pc was

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Shimada, J., Hotomi, M., Kuki, K., Yamanaka, N., Mitsuda, T., & Yokota, S. (2000). Molecular analysis of pathogens of upper respiratory tract infections in children--a study of nasopharyngeal S. pneumoniae and PBP genes in acute otitis media. Nippon Jibiinkoka Gakkai Kaiho, 103(5), 552–559. https://doi.org/10.3950/jibiinkoka.103.552

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