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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, October 2000, p. 3846-3848, Vol. 38, No. 10
Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference
Laboratory, North Western Health Care Network, North
Melbourne,1 Microbiology Department,
Mater Misericordiae Hospital, South Brisbane,
Queensland,2 and Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, Melbourne University, Victoria
3010,3 Australia
Received 15 March 2000/Returned for modification 1 June
2000/Accepted 13 July 2000
A probable new Helicobacter species was isolated from
the blood of a 14-month-old aboriginal child who presented with
vomiting, diarrhea, fever, and dry cough. The most similar 16S rRNA
gene sequence was that of Helicobacter fennelliae CCUG
18820T but the new sequence differed from it by at least 32 base substitutions and by the presence of a large (353-nucleotide)
intervening sequence.
Case report.
A 14-month-old aboriginal child
presented with a 1-week history of vomiting, diarrhea, fever, and dry
cough. On admission, his temperature was 38°C and he had shortness of
breath, rhinorrhoea, a discharge from the right ear, and crepitations
on the left base of the lung. An ear swab grew Pseudomonas
aeruginosa and Streptococcus faecalis. Lumbar puncture
showed the cerebrospinal fluid was clear, and culture was negative.
Urine collected from the patient was consistent with Enterococcus
faecalis urinary tract infection. Hematological investigations
showed eosinophilia, neutrophil leukocytosis, toxic granulation, and
atypical lymphocytosis. A blood culture taken on admission grew a
spiral gram-negative rod resembling Campylobacter species.
X-rays taken at admission suggested a left lower lobe pneumonia. The
organism was not isolated from the patient's feces or from his sputum
(although incubation conditions may not have been ideal for the
isolation of this organism). The patient was treated with intravenous
ceftriaxone for 3 days (500 mg daily), with clinical improvement, and
was discharged with a 1-week supply of oral amoxicillin (125 mg three
times a day).
0095-1137/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
A Probable New Helicobacter Species
Isolated from a Patient with Bacteremia

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ABSTRACT
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TEXT
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G =
128 kcal/mol) with a primary stem of 16 nt (formed between the inverted terminal repeats
of the IVS) and considerable base pairing elsewhere. The presence of an
IVS in the 16S rRNA gene of this isolate is not surprising, as these
elements occur in the 16S and 23S rRNA genes of many other bacteria
(references 13 and 18 and
references cited therein). We believe that our isolate shows the first
example of an IVS that has a homologue in a different rRNA gene (of
another organism) and where the two are in opposite orientations with respect to their surrounding genes. It is difficult to imagine a simple
model of IVS transfer between organisms that would account for this
pattern (18).
On the basis of the type of disease, Helicobacter spp. can
be divided into three distinct groups. The first consists of gastric helicobacters such as Helicobacter pylori and
Helicobacter heilmanii, which cause upper
gastrointestinal tract diseases in humans. The second group consists of
Helicobacter spp. that are isolated mainly from animals such
as ferrets (11), rodents (16), dogs (10, 28), cats (9), cheetahs (7), monkeys
(3), and other mammals and have been found to cause disease
in their respective hosts. The third group consists of helicobacters
that cause enteric and systemic diseases in humans, such as H. cinaedi (4, 19-22, 32, 34), H. fennelliae
(19, 34), "H. westmeadii" (35), H. rappini (1, 23, 24, 31),
Helicobacter sp. strain Mainz (8, 14), H. pullorum (5, 27, 29), Helicobacter sp. strain CLO3 (21), and a number of unnamed species in
GenBank, such as two strains isolated from AIDS patients in North
America (36). All were recovered from the blood of patients
except H. pullorum, and most were isolated from
immunosuppressed persons. The reservoir in this group is unknown.
Poultry are a likely source of food-borne enteritis in humans (2,
27), and H. cinaedi has been found in hamsters
(12). Domestic animals like dogs and cats are also possible
sources, and recently, two reports implied that dogs might be the
reservoir for H. rappini infection (23, 31). Dogs
are commonly found in and live in close proximity with aboriginal
communities in Australia.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The sequence determined in this study has been deposited in GenBank under accession number AF237612.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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M.D.-S. was partly supported by the Australian Research Council.
Thanks go to K. Sanderson, A. Hurtado, and Dennis Linton for comments and unpublished information on IVS.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Died 14 August 2000 after a long illness.
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010. Australia. Phone: 61-3-8344 5693. Fax: 61-3-8347 1540. E-mail: m.dyall-smith{at}microbiology.unimelb.edu.au.
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