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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2001, p. 1048-1056, Vol. 39, No. 3
Third Branch Office, Center for Disease
Control, Department of Health,1 and the
Institute of Molecular Biology, National Chung Hsing
University,2 Taichung, Taiwan 402, Republic of
China
Received 27 October 2000/Returned for modification 16 December
2000/Accepted 29 December 2000
An outbreak of shigellosis occurred in a township of Nantou Conuty
in central Taiwan from August to October in 1996. The infections extended to two neighboring townships and continued to the end of 1996. Forty cases were confirmed during the period, in contrast to only one
confirmed case in Nantou County in 1996 before the outbreak. All of
these 41 cases in 1996 were identified as infections with
Shigella flexneri serotype 2a. In order to trace the source of the infections, the 41 isolates recovered were analyzed by plasmid
profile and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). There was no
correlation between the plasmid profile results and the PFGE results,
and the latter were used for subtyping of the 41 isolates. Twenty-two
isolates (53%) had the same NotI and XbaI PFGE
patterns, and 4 isolates (10%) had an additional unstable plasmid band
in their NotI patterns but otherwise had the same NotI and XbaI patterns as the 22 isolates.
These 26 isolates were designated the outbreak strain, and of these, 24 appeared in eight villages in one township and 2 appeared in a
neighboring township. Fourteen of the remaining 15 isolates, including
the isolate recovered 7 months before the outbreak, had both
NotI and XbaI PFGE patterns closely related to
those of the outbreak strain, indicating that Shigella
infections were endemic in the area. By tracing the first isolation
dates of the outbreak strain in individual villages and the neighboring
township, it was found that the strain spread along the major arterial
road and its branch road as time passed. Our molecular typing results
and epidemiological data demonstrated the endemic nature of the
outbreak strain as well as a person-to-person mode of transmission for
the widespread infections the strain caused.
0095-1137/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.39.3.1048-1056.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Molecular Epidemiology of a Shigella
flexneri Outbreak in a Mountainous Township in Taiwan, Republic
of China
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of
Molecular Biology, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung, Taiwan
402, Republic of China. Phone: 886-4-2851885. Fax: 886-4-2874879. E-mail: jhchen{at}dragon.nchu.edu.tw.
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