International Journal of Infectious Diseases (May 2018)

Bacterial pathogen spectrum of acute diarrheal outpatients in an urbanized rural district in Southwest China

  • Yongming Zhou,
  • Jingyun Zhang,
  • Shukun Wang,
  • Wen Xu,
  • Weili Liang,
  • Meiying Yan,
  • Duochun Wang,
  • Baowei Diao,
  • Bo Pang,
  • Xin Lu,
  • Fenxia Fan,
  • Jie Li,
  • Jing Lou,
  • Li Zhang,
  • Ruibai Wang,
  • Xiaoying Cui,
  • Meng Zhao,
  • Rui Wu,
  • Hongyan Cai,
  • Xiaoli Du,
  • Zhigang Cui,
  • Wenpeng Gu,
  • Rusong Yang,
  • Biao Kan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 70
pp. 59 – 64

Abstract

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Objectives: To conduct a one-year pathogen surveillance of acute diarrheal disease based on outpatient clinics in township hospitals in rural Hongta District of Yunnan Province, China. Methods: Fecal specimens of acute diarrhea cases and relevant epidemiological information were collected. Salmonella, Shigella, Vibrio, Aeromonas, Plesiomonas shigelloides and diarrheogenic Escherichia coli (DEC) were examined. Results: Among the 797 stool specimens sampled, 198 samples (24.8%) were positive in pathogen isolation, and 223 strains were isolated. The order of isolation rates from high to low were DEC, Aeromonas, P. shigelloides, Salmonella, Shigella and Vibrio. The overall positive rate in middle school students and preschool children was relatively high; while the overall positive rate of less than 1-year-old infants and above 55 years olds was relatively low. The isolates were analyzed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Some cases had the same or very close onset time, and the isolates had similar PFGE patterns, suggesting a possible outbreak once occurred but was not detected by the current infectious disease reporting system. Conclusions: Pathogen infection and transmission in rapidly urbanized rural areas is a serious issue. There is a great need for a more sensitive and accurate mode of monitoring, reporting and outbreak identification of diarrheal disease. Keywords: Diarrheal disease, Diarrheogenic pathogen, Molecular typing, Surveillance, Bacterial pathogen