Journal article

Escherichia coli and community-acquired gastroenteritis, Melbourne, Australia

RM Robins-Browne, AM Bordun, M Tauschek, VR Bennett-Wood, J Russell, F Oppedisano, NA Lister, KA Bettelheim, CK Fairley, MI Sinclair, ME Helland

Emerging Infectious Diseases | CENTERS DISEASE CONTROL | Published : 2004

Open access

Abstract

As part of a study to determine the effects of water filtration on the incidence of community-acquired gastroenteritis in Melbourne, Australia, we examined fecal samples from patients with gastroenteritis and asymptomatic persons for diarrheagenic strains of Escherichia coli. Atypical strains of enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) were the most frequently identified pathogens of all bacterial, viral, and parasitic agents in patients with gastroenteritis. Moreover, atypical EPEC were more common in patients with gastroenteritis (89 [12.8%] of 696) than in asymptomatic persons (11 [2.3%] of 489, p < 0.0001). Twenty-two random isolates of atypical EPEC that were characterized further showed marked ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers