INVESTIGATION OF AN OUTBREAK OF CAMPYLOBACTER-UPSALIENSIS IN DAY-CARE-CENTERS IN BRUSSELS - ANALYSIS OF RELATIONSHIPS AMONG ISOLATES BY PHENOTYPIC AND GENOTYPIC TYPING METHODS
H. Goossens et al., INVESTIGATION OF AN OUTBREAK OF CAMPYLOBACTER-UPSALIENSIS IN DAY-CARE-CENTERS IN BRUSSELS - ANALYSIS OF RELATIONSHIPS AMONG ISOLATES BY PHENOTYPIC AND GENOTYPIC TYPING METHODS, The Journal of infectious diseases, 172(5), 1995, pp. 1298-1305
An outbreak of Campylobacter upsaliensis in four Brussels day care cen
ters (A, B-1, B-2, and C) affected 44 children. Diarrhea was the major
symptom. From January 1991 to June 1992, the outbreak strain was isol
ated from 3, 1, and 21 (of 68) children in centers A, B-1, and B-2, re
spectively, and from 19 of 22 children in center C. IgG, IgM, and IgA
antibodies were detected by Western blotting of serum specimens of 9 o
f 10 and 13 of 16 children in centers B-2 and C, respectively. Strains
were typed by biotyping, DNA restriction-based and antibiotic suscept
ibility typing, whole cell protein and plasmid analysis, restriction f
ragment length polymorphism (RFLP), and polymerase chain reaction (PCR
). On the basis of RFLP and PCR typing, the strains could be divided i
nto two strongly related clonal variants: One was isolated only from t
he children of center A and the second only from children in the other
day care centers.