Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 2009)

Epidemiology of Vibrio parahaemolyticus Outbreaks, Southern Chile

  • Erika Harth,
  • Luis Matsuda,
  • Cristina Hernández,
  • Maria L. Rioseco,
  • Jaime Romero,
  • Narjol González-Escalona,
  • Jaime Martínez-Urtaza,
  • Romilio T. Espejo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1502.071269
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
pp. 163 – 168

Abstract

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Disease outbreaks caused by Vibrio parahaemolyticus in Puerto Montt, Chile, began in 2004 and reached a peak in 2005 at 3,600 clinical cases. Until 2006, every analyzed case was caused by the serovar O3:K6 pandemic strain. In the summer of 2007, only 475 cases were reported; 73% corresponded to the pandemic strain. This decrease was associated with a change in serotype of many pandemic isolates to O3:K59 and the emergence of new clinical strains. One of these strains, associated with 11% of the cases, was genotypically different from the pandemic strain but contained genes that were identical to those found on its pathogenicity island. These findings suggest that pathogenicity-related genes were laterally transferred from the pandemic strain to one of the different V. parahaemolyticus groups comprising the diverse and shifting bacterial population in shellfish in this region.

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