Isolation of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli from British troops in Saudi Arabia

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Abstract

Specimens from 181 patients with diarrhoea were examined by a Military General Hospital in a 3-month period during deployment of troops to Saudi Arabia in 1990/1. DNA probes for heat labile (LT) and heat stable (ST) enterotoxin genes identified enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) in 47 of the specimens (26%) and 49 ETEC strains were isolated. The majority (55%) belonged to a novel ETEC serotype having the O-antigen 159 and a flagellar antigen designated as a provisional new type. They produced ST and the coli surface associated antigen (CS)6. Strains of serotype O6:H16 represented 22% of the ETEC examined. They produced ST, LT and CSS together with either CS1 or CS2. The remaining ETEC belonged to seven O:H serotypes. Overall, ST was the only enterotoxin gene identified in 73% of the ETEC and 67% of the strains expressed CS6 in the absence of other colonization antigens. Resistance to three or more antibiotics was observed in 53% of the ETEC, including most of the O159 strains. © 1995, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.

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Willshaw, G. A., Cheasty, T., Rowe, B., Smith, H. R., Faithfull-Davies, D. N., & Brooks, T. G. J. (1995). Isolation of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli from British troops in Saudi Arabia. Epidemiology and Infection, 115(3), 455–463. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268800058611

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