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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 11 1995, 2823-2825, Vol 33, No. 11
M Goulet, R Dular, JG Tully, G Billowes and S Kasatiya
Mycoplasma pneumoniae is a common etiologic agent of lower respiratory
tract infections in humans. However, it has been reported previously that
the organism has occasionally been isolated from sites other than the
oropharynx and respiratory tract. We report the isolation of 24 strains of
M. pneumoniae from urogenital specimens obtained from 22 female patients.
Most isolates were of cervical origin from patients attending several local
gynecological clinics over a 2-year period. Strains were also isolated from
the urethra of one of three healthy male sexual partners of female patients
positive for the organism. Single serum specimens obtained from three
female patients and three different male sexual partners showed antibody
levels suggestive of either recent respiratory infection or genital tract
colonization with M. pneumoniae. Although there is no apparent definitive
explanation for the localized outbreak of the organism at these unusual
sites, the possible transfer through sexual and/or orogenital contact
remains the most likely mode of transmission. The occurrence of an organism
with obvious pathogenicity for human epithelial tissue in the urogenital
tract suggests such transfer could play a role in genital tract infection.
Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Isolation of Mycoplasma pneumoniae from the human urogenital tract
Montfort Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
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