Journal article
Increasing rates and clinical consequences of nalidixic acid-resistant isolates causing enteric fever in returned travellers: An 18-year experience
S Hume, T Schulz, P Vinton, T Korman, J Torresi
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases | Published : 2009
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the rate and clinical consequences of nalidixic acid-resistant (NAR) isolates in travellers with enteric fever presenting to a hospital in a developed country. We retrospectively examined microbiologically confirmed cases of enteric fever in adult returned travellers over an 18-year period presenting to two tertiary referral hospitals in Melbourne, Australia. There were 59 cases of Salmonella typhi infection, 43 cases of S. paratyphi A infection and two cases of S. paratyphi B infection. Most patients reported recent travel to India (36%) or Indonesia (29%). NAR isolates were commonly encountered (41% of all isolates), particularly from India (75%), P..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We acknowledge Elizabeth Matchett, Royal Microbiologic Hospital, Joan Pauling, Melbourne Diagnostic Unit, and Despina Kotsanas, Southern Health, for their contribution to the data collection.