lunes, 6 de abril de 2015

CDC: Shigella infections becoming resistant to antibiotics

Research conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggests a greater proportion of Shigella infections in the United States are now resistant to a very important antibiotic.
Shigella causes an estimated 500,000 cases of diarrhea in the United States annually and is transmitted easily from person to person and through contaminated food and recreational water.
Outbreaks of shigellosis frequently are large and drawn-out. Although diarrhea caused by Shigella sonnei typically resolves without treatment, patients with mild illness often are treated with antimicrobial medications because they can reduce the duration of symptoms and the shedding of Shigella in feces.

The national molecular subtyping network for foodborne disease, PulseNet, detected a multistate cluster of S. sonnei infections in December 2014, CDC’s National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) laboratory determined that isolates from the cluster were resistant to ciprofloxacin.
Between May 2014 and February 2015, CDC identified 157 cases of ciprofloxacin-resistant S. sonnei infections. Ciprofloxacin is the first-line treatment for adults with shigellosis because the bug’s resistance to other antimicrobials is either common or increasing. Of 126 total isolates with antimicrobial susceptibility information, 87 percent were not susceptible to ciprofloxacin.

There were 95 cases of ciprofloxacin-resistant Shigella infections in residents of, or travelers to, San Francisco in late 2014, but only nine of them made it into PulseNet.
About half of the 157 ciprofloxacin-resistant Shigella cases Pulse Net detected were associated with international travel.
Of the 75 patients with available information, 40 reported traveling internationally during their incubation period. Twenty-two went to the Dominican Republic, four to Haiti, eight to India, and three to Morocco.

No common airline or airport exposures were identified. Most travelers to the Dominican Republic stayed at resorts in Punta Cana; however, no common hotel, resort, restaurant, or event was reported.Travelers need to be aware of the risks of acquiring multidrug-resistant pathogens, carefully wash their hands, and adhere to food and water precautions during international travel,” CDC said.
Although Shigella strains are strongly associated with international travel, it is now circulating domestically. If introduced to certain populations, Shigella can spread rapidly and cause large, protracted outbreaks, as occurred in San Francisco.


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