Abstract
Of 70 black South African infants and children with acute summer diarrhoea, 30 (43 %) were infected with enteropathogenic serogroups of Escherichia coli (EPEC), 13 (19%) with enterotoxigenic Gram-negative bacilli, 12 (17%) with Salmonella sp., 6 (9%) with Shigella sp., and 3 (4%) with rotaviruses. 13 (19%) patients were infected simultaneously with more than one enteropathogen, and no pathogen was detected in 22 (T31 %). In addition, 6 (15%) of 41 unselected patients were excreting Campylobacter fetus. Of 30 age-matched controls drawn from the same population, 5 (17%) were infected with EPEC serotypes, and 1 each with Salmonella sp. and rotavirus. This study stresses the polymicrobial nature of paediatric diarrhoea in a developing community and shows the continued importance of EPEC in this setting.
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CITATION STYLE
Robins-Browne, R. M., Still, C. S., Miliotis, M. D., Richardson, N. J., Koornhof, H. J., Freiman, I., … Hartman, E. (1980). Summer diarrhoea in African infants and children. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 55(12), 923–928. https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.55.12.923
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