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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 06 1997, 1300-1303, Vol 35, No. 6
P Grubel, JS Hoffman, FK Chong, NA Burstein, C Mepani and DR Cave
The mode of transmission of Helicobacter pylori is unknown. Since viable
bacteria have been shown to be excreted in feces from infected individuals
and houseflies habitually develop and feed on excrement, we hypothesized
that flies ingest and harbor H. pylori and, in turn, contaminate the human
environment. This study examined the possible vector potential of
houseflies (Musca domestica) for H. pylori. Caged houseflies were exposed
to freshly grown H. pylori on agar plates. After a 6-h feeding period, the
plates were removed and were replaced with sterile petri dishes containing
a droplet of sterile brucella broth. At regular intervals, small numbers of
houseflies were removed for microbiological and histological analysis, and
the petri dishes were replaced with fresh sterile plates with fresh drops
of brucella broth. The flies' bodies, the flies' dissected alimentary
tracts, and excreta on the petri dishes were cultured for H. pylori, whose
identity was confirmed by the urease, catalase, and oxidase reactions and
Gram staining. In contrast to control flies, viable H. pylori could be
isolated from external surfaces for up to 12 h and from gut and excreta for
as long as 30 h after the initial feeding period. After 30 h other
gram-negative bacteria overgrew the cultures of samples from all locations
tested, rendering the selective culture of H. pylori colonies impossible.
Histological analysis revealed Helicobacter-like organisms in the gut lumen
and attached to intestinal epithelial cells. We conclude that houseflies
can harbor viable H. pylori on their bodies and in their intestinal tracts.
They are also able to disseminate viable H. pylori in excreta, and they may
therefore present a significant reservoir and be a vector in the
transmission of H. pylori.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Vector potential of houseflies (Musca domestica) for Helicobacter pylori
Division of Gastroenterology, St. Elizabeth's Medical Center of Boston, Massachusetts 02135, USA.
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