Colicin typing as an epidemiological tool in the investigation of outbreaks of Shigella sonnei.
- 1 January 1971
- journal article
- Vol. 21 (1) , 21-6
Abstract
Shigella sonnei has become the most frequently reported cause of shigellosis in the United States. Since Shigella subgroup D has no other serotypes, colicin production has been used as a basis for differentiating and identifying epidemiologically related strains. The results of colicin typing 115 cultures of S. sonnei from eight outbreaks of shigellosis occurring in widely separated regions of the United States support the usefulness of this technique. In each outbreak, the cultures were either of the same colicin type or were uniformly untypable. Unrelated cases yielded a variety of types. Definitions of the relative frequencies and geographic distributions of the various strains of S. sonnei in the United States await an accumulation of experience with the method.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Changes in the epidemiology of dysentery in Poland and the situation in Europe.1968
- Colicin type, biochemical type and drug-resistance pattern of Shigella sonnei isolated in Japan and its neighboring countries.1968
- Determination of biotype, phage type and colicinogenic character of Shigella sonnei, and its epidemiologic importance.1968
- Phage typing of Shigella sonnei.1968
- Colicine production as an epidemiological marker of Shigella sonneiEpidemiology and Infection, 1964
- A Method for TypingShigella sonnei, using Colicine Production as a MarkerJournal of Clinical Pathology, 1958