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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 12 1997, 3150-3155, Vol 35, No. 12
J Okuda, M Ishibashi, E Hayakawa, T Nishino, Y Takeda, AK Mukhopadhyay, S Garg, SK Bhattacharya, GB Nair and M Nishibuchi
Active surveillance of Vibrio parahaemolyticus infection among hospitalized
patients in Calcutta, India, was initiated in January 1994. The incidence
of cases of V. parahaemolyticus infection suddenly increased in February
1996 and has remained high since then. One hundred thirty-four strains of
V. parahaemolyticus isolated from January 1994 to August 1996 were examined
for serovar, the presence of the thermostable direct hemolysin gene (tdh)
and tdh-related hemolysin genes (trh1 and trh2), production of urease, and
antibiogram. Strains of the O3:K6 serovar appeared for the first time in
February 1996. The O3:K6 serovar strains accounted for 50 to 80% of the
strains isolated during the high-incidence period (February to August
1996). All of the serovar O3:K6 strains carried the tdh gene but not the
trh genes and did not produce urease. All of the isolates except two were
sensitive to all of the antibiotics tested. These and the results of
analysis by an arbitrarily primed PCR method indicated that the O3:K6
serovar strains belong to a unique clone. When the O3:K6 serovar strains,
isolated from travelers arriving in Japan from Southeast Asian countries,
were compared by the arbitrarily primed PCR method, the strains isolated
between 1982 and 1993 were distinct from Calcutta O3:K6 while the strains
isolated in 1995 and 1996 were indistinguishable from the Calcutta O3:K6
strains. The results suggest that this unique O3:K6 clone may have become
prevalent not only in Calcutta but also in Southeast Asian countries very
recently. Not only the O3:K6 strains but also the non-O3:K6, tdh-bearing
strains isolated in 1996 produced thermostable direct hemolysin at high
levels, and thus the level of hemolysin produced does not appear to have
influenced the high incidence of serovar O3:K6 strains.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Emergence of a unique O3:K6 clone of Vibrio parahaemolyticus in Calcutta, India, and isolation of strains from the same clonal group from Southeast Asian travelers arriving in Japan [In Process Citation]
Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University, Japan.
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