QUANTITATIVE STUDIES OF NASAL CARRIERS OF STAPHYLOCOCCI AMONG HOSPITALIZED PATIENTS*
Open Access
- 1 January 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 40 (1) , 23-30
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci104233
Abstract
Sixty-four % of staphylococci isolated from lesions were lysed by phages 80/81 but only 26% of staphylococci from the noses of hospitalized patients were lysed by these phages. Over half of the patients were receiving antibiotics at the time staphylococcal infection was acquired, and the differences between phage types might be explained in part by the observations that staphylococci lysed by phages 80/81 were much more frequently multiple-drug-resistant than were other staphylococci. In addition, more staphylococci could be isolated from nasal carriers of 80/81 staphylococci than from carriers of other types of staphylococci in the absence of infection. Staphylococci could be isolated from the clothing of nasal carriers of over 10,000 colonies of staphylococci per culture more frequently than they could be isolated from the clothing of nasal carriers of smaller numbers of staphylococci or from the clothing of patients who were not nasal carriers.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nasal Staphylococci and Sepsis in Hospital PatientsBMJ, 1959
- Studies on the origin of drug-resistant staphylococci in a mental hospitalThe American Journal of Medicine, 1959
- The Relation between the Nasal-Staphylococcal-Carrier State and the Incidence of Postoperative ComplicationsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1959
- Observations on the nature of staphylococcal infections.1959
- ENVIRONMENTAL PENICILLIN AND PENICILLIN-RESISTANT STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUSThe Lancet, 1958
- Staphylococcal Infections in the Hospital and CommunityAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1958
- THE VIRULENCE OF STAPHYLOCOCCUS-PYOGENES FOR MAN - A STUDY OF THE PROBLEMS OF WOUND INFECTION1957
- Drug resistant staphylococci. I. Their distribution in hospital patients.1956
- NASAL CARRIAGE OF STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS IN THE GENERAL POPULATION AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO HOSPITALIZATION AND TO PENICILLIN THERAPYThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1954
- Studies on Staphylococci from Hospital Patients. I. Predominance of Strains of Group III Phage Patterns Which Are Resistant to Multiple Antibiotics12Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1954