Abstract
In 1973-1978, the New York City Department of Health serogrouped 648 isolates of Neisseria meningitidis and investigated 259 cases of meningococcal meningitis and meningococcemia. Although meningitis and septicemia were mainly due to groups B and C, groups Y and W-135 caused nearly 1/3 of the cases. There was no difference in mortalities when disease caused by the classic groups A, B and C was compared with disease caused by the new serogroups X, Y, Z, W-135 and Z''. Most isolates from the respiratory tract were from the new serogroups, especially Z and Z'' (some from patients with pneumonia), as were most of those from the genitourinary tract, anal canal and miscellaneous sites. Group X was infrequent. Although most isolations of these groups of N. meningitidis are apparently from asymptomatic carriers, Y and W-135 cause a substantial number of acute symptomatic infections, particularly, septicemia.

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