Ashdown L, Cassidy J
Townsville General Hospital, Queensland.
Pathology. 1991 Jul;23(3):233-4. doi: 10.3109/00313029109063572.
A case of laboratory-acquired typhoid fever is described. The case was complicated by a self-limiting Salmonella give gastroenteritis which may also have been laboratory-acquired and which occurred during the incubation period of the Salmonella typhi infection. The symptoms of typhoid were not sufficiently severe for the patient to seek medical attention and she was recovering from the infection when the typhoid bacillus was isolated from her stools. The mode of transmission of the S. typhi was presumed to be a laboratory infection from an unknown source. Although there was no obvious breakdown in safe laboratory techniques, the infecting dose of S. typhi is known to be small and the dangers of handling specimens which may contain this bacterium are emphasized.