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Home NEWS Science News Health

Klebsiella pneumoniae drug resistance in infants studied in Kazan

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
October 10, 2018
in Health
Reading Time: 1 min read
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The research was conducted by Kazan Federal University, Kazan State Medical University, City Clinical Children's Hospital N 1, and Republican Clinical Infectious Diseases Hospital.

K. pneumoniae is known to cause a number of infectious diseases of lungs, kidneys, intestines, liver, and blood. It has become widely known in recent years because of quickly growing drug resistance backed by the production of extended-spectrum beta lactamases (ESBLs).

To study its virulence factors, a strain was extracted from the blood of neonates with sepsis and compared with strains from those with urinary tract infections.

In neonates with sepsis testing of K. pneumoniae isolates for ESBL production was positive in 60% of cases, in neonates with UTI–in 40% of cases. The authors commented that one of key virulence factors – the rmpA gene – was found in both groups of infants. This means the prevalence of virulent K. pneumoniae strains is higher than was previously thought, and heavier clinical forms of diseases were found in patients with those virulent strains.

###

Media Contact

Yury Nurmeev
[email protected]
@KazanUni

http://kpfu.ru/eng

https://kpfu.ru/eng/news-eng/klebsiella-pneumoniae-drug-resistance-in-infants.html

Related Journal Article

http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2018.00225

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