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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Escherichia coli in bacteremia: K and O antigens and serum sensitivity of strains from adults and neonates.

Comparisons of O- and K-antigenic types and serum sensitivity were carried out with 149 strains of Escherichia coli isolated from adults with bacteremia and 46 strains from neonates with bacteremia. O-antigenic types O6, O4, O2, O16, O18, and O7 were observed most frequently, but their relative prevalence did not differ materially between adult and neonatal bacteremias. A greater proportion of strains from neonatal bacteremia contained K1 antigen and were autoagglutinable compared with strains from adult bacteremia, although K1 was the most frequent K antigen found in strains from adults. K-antigen-containing strains did not appear to be associated with enhanced severity of bacteremia, but nontypable strains, auto-agglutinable strains, and strains of O-antigenic types O4, O6, and O8 were associated with a greater frequency of shock and fatal outcome in adults. No differences could be detected between the serum sensitivities of E. coli isolated from adult bacteremia and those from neonatal bacteremia. K antigen did not affect serum sensitivity, but E. coli strains of O types O18, O2, O4, and O7 were more serum-resistant than other E. coli. Bacteremia caused by serum-sensitive E. coli was less often associated with shock and death than bacteremia caused by serum-resistant E. coli.[1]

References

  1. Escherichia coli in bacteremia: K and O antigens and serum sensitivity of strains from adults and neonates. McCabe, W.R., Kaijser, B., Olling, S., Uwaydah, M., Hanson, L.A. J. Infect. Dis. (1978) [Pubmed]
 
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