Vaagland Hogne, Blomberg Bjørn, Krüger Carsten, Naman Naftali, Jureen Roland, Langeland Nina
Department of Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery, Haukeland University Hospital, N-5021 Bergen, Norway.
BMC Infect Dis. 2004 Sep 14;4:35. doi: 10.1186/1471-2334-4-35.
Clinicians at Haydom Lutheran Hospital, a rural hospital in northern Tanzania noted an unusually high case-fatality rate of pediatric meningitis and suspected an outbreak of an unknown agent or an organism resistant to the empirical therapy.
We established a provisional microbiology laboratory to investigate the suspected outbreak. Blood and spinal fluid specimens were taken from children below the age of seven years with suspected meningitis. The blood and spinal fluid specimens were inoculated in commercial blood culture bottles and locally prepared Thayer-Martin medium in slanted tubes, respectively. The bacterial isolates were sent to Norway for further investigation, including susceptibility testing and pulsed-field gel-electrophoresis (PFGE).
Among 24 children with suspected meningitis and/or septicemia, five neonates had meningitis caused by Salmonella enterica serotype Enteritidis, all of whom died. Two children had S. Enteritidis septicemia without meningitis and both survived. Genotyping with PFGE suggested a clonal outbreak. The salmonella strain was resistant to ampicillin and sensitive to gentamicin, the two drugs commonly used to treat neonatal meningitis at the hospital.
The investigation reminds us that nontyphoidal salmonellae can cause meningitis associated with very high case-fatality rates. Resistance to multiple antimicrobial agents increases the risk of treatment failure and may have contributed to the fatal outcome in all of the five patients with salmonella meningitis. The investigation indicated that the outbreak was nosocomial and the outbreak subsided after hygienic measures were instituted. Establishing a provisional microbiological laboratory is a valuable and affordable tool to investigate and control outbreaks even in remote rural areas.
坦桑尼亚北部一家乡村医院——海多姆路德医院的临床医生注意到小儿脑膜炎的病死率异常高,并怀疑是由一种未知病原体或对经验性治疗耐药的生物体引发的疫情。
我们建立了一个临时微生物实验室来调查这起疑似疫情。从疑似患有脑膜炎的7岁以下儿童身上采集血液和脑脊液样本。血液和脑脊液样本分别接种于商用血培养瓶和当地制备的斜管Thayer-Martin培养基中。分离出的细菌被送往挪威进行进一步调查,包括药敏试验和脉冲场凝胶电泳(PFGE)。
在24名疑似患有脑膜炎和/或败血症的儿童中,5名新生儿患有由肠炎沙门氏菌肠炎血清型引起的脑膜炎,他们全部死亡。2名儿童患有肠炎沙门氏菌败血症但无脑膜炎,两人均存活。PFGE基因分型表明是一次克隆性暴发。该沙门氏菌菌株对氨苄西林耐药,对庆大霉素敏感,这两种药物是该医院常用的治疗新生儿脑膜炎的药物。
该调查提醒我们,非伤寒沙门氏菌可引起病死率极高的脑膜炎。对多种抗菌药物耐药会增加治疗失败的风险,可能是导致所有5例沙门氏菌脑膜炎患者死亡的原因。调查表明此次疫情是医院感染,采取卫生措施后疫情得到缓解。建立临时微生物实验室是一种有价值且经济实惠的工具,即使在偏远农村地区也可用于调查和控制疫情。