We performed a prospective study of consecutive pneumococcal infections documented during a six-month period in our clinical microbiology laboratory. A total of 59 cultures obtained from clinically significant specimens of 58 patients were positive for Streptococcus pneumoniae. Relative penicillin resistance occurred in 14 strains (24%) and only one (1.7%) was highly resistant to penicillin (minimum inhibitory concentration = 2.0 micrograms ml-1). Resistance to common alternative drugs was not found. Serotypes were of a wide variety, however types 1, 7 and 14 predominated (60% of all blood culture isolates). Twenty-three patients with community-acquired infection required hospitalization. Nosocomial pneumonia developed in three additional cases (14%). Invasive disease was diagnosed in 24 patients with pneumonia representing the most common infection (22 patients). Pneumonia was characterized by a high incidence of serious underlying diseases (82%) and associated bacteraemia (68%). Compared with controls, patients with penicillin-resistant pneumococcal pneumonia had a significantly higher incidence of previous hospitalizations and use of antibiotics (57 vs. 7%, P = 0.02). The overall case fatality rate was high (36%) and did not differ significantly between patients with pneumonia due to resistant and susceptible strains. The epidemiology and clinical spectrum of serious pneumococcal infections in Israel is similar to those described in many parts of the world, but high level resistance to penicillin and to other alternative drugs is still rare.
Epidemiology and clinical spectrum of pneumococcal infections: an Israeli viewpoint
폐렴구균 감염의 역학 및 임상 스펙트럼: 이스라엘의 관점
[Category] 폐렴구균 감염증,
[Article Type] journal-article
[Source] pubmed
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