Publications by authors named "Gratten M"

This study reports a 16-year prospective surveillance of invasive disease isolates in central Australian Aborigines. There were 621 (89.6% of total) isolates recovered from Aborigines.

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The emergence of type 6B Streptococcus pneumoniae resistant to five antibiotics (penicillin, chloramphenicol, trimethoprim sulphamethoxazole, erythromycin and tetracycline) in both the Northern Territory and Queensland prompted an investigation of the genetic relatedness and patterns of migration of the isolates. Pulsed field gel electrophoresis of genomic DNA of 74 multiple drug-resistant (MDR) isolates cultured in both regions between August 1988 and June 1997 showed that 100% of MDR isolates from the Northern Territory and 96% of MDR strains from Queensland were genetically indistinguishable or closely related to the index strain. None of a further 65 type 6B isolates that were resistant to one or two, or susceptible to all of the above antibiotics, were clonally related to the MDR pneumococci.

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Research indicates a high burden of pneumococcal disease and great potential benefits of conjugate vaccines in Indigenous Australian children, who should have high priority for delivery of these vaccines. Incidence of invasive pneumococcal disease in Indigenous people in central Australia is the highest reported in the world (2053 per 100,000 persons per year in those aged under two years). Acute respiratory infection is a major cause of morbidity in Indigenous children in rural and remote areas.

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Background: Aboriginal children in central Australia have attack rates for acute lower respiratory tract infection (ALRI) that are similar to those in developing countries. Although mortality rates are much lower than in developing countries, morbidity is high and ALRI is still the leading cause of hospitalization. However, there are no data on the etiology of ALRI in this population.

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The prevalence of penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae in Thailand has dramatically increased over the last decade. During a national survey, which was conducted from 1992 to 1994, 37.2% of the pneumococci isolated from the nasopharynges of children with acute respiratory tract infections were penicillin resistant (MIC, >/=0.

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Serotypes responsible for 842 cases of invasive pneumococcal disease in Queensland between February 1990 and October 1997 were identified. Type 14 caused 37.5% of episodes in children aged 0-4 years and 19.

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These studies have identified a major genetic lineage of capsule serotype 12F Streptococcus pneumoniae, which has maintained two different types of the pneumococcal surface protein A (PspA) virulence factor and caused invasive disease in geographically disjoint locations. Twenty outbreak strains from a Texas jail and Maryland day care center and 16 reference strains from Texas, Maryland, Washington, Michigan, Oklahoma, Missouri, Alaska, and Australia were examined. Although the Texas and Maryland outbreak strains were indistinguishable by IS1167 and boxA genotyping procedures, all strains examined were members of a genetically similar lineage.

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The objective of the study was to examine the appropriateness of the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) recommendations concerning pneumococcal vaccination for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island adults. Laboratory surveillance of invasive pneumococcal disease identified 95 cases acquired by adults 15 years of age and over in Far North Queensland from 1992 to 1995. The most common diagnosis was pneumonia (77 per cent).

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We describe 27 cases of multiple drug-resistant pneumococcal infection in Queensland children (7 cases) and adults (20 cases), between February 1995 and October 1996. Seven patients had invasive disease. Serotypes were those commonly associated with paediatric infections and included types 19F (15 strains), 14 (6), 23F (4), 6A (1) and 19A (1).

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In February 1995, single-dose azithromycin was given to children with trachoma and their household contacts who were children. For children with trachoma, rates of carriage of pneumococci immediately before treatment with azithromycin and 2-3 weeks, 2 months, and 6 months after treatment were 68% (54 of 79), 29% (11 of 38), 78% (29 of 37), and 87% (34 of 39), respectively. The proportion of carriage-positive children with azithromycin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae strains was 1 of 54 (1.

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Objective: Because of its practical importance for public health monitoring in developing countries, we aimed to determine whether susceptibility to penicillin of pneumococci isolated from the upper respiratory tract (URT) is representative of the susceptibility of pneumococci causing pneumonia in children.

Method: The serogroup distribution and minimum inhibitory concentration of penicillin for 56 and 90 isolates from blood and cerebrospinal fluid, respectively, were compared with those of 833 pneumococcal carriage isolates from Papua New Guinean children. These included 154 and 98 strains from bacteremic and nonbacteremic hospitalized patients with pneumonia, respectively, 350 from outpatients with respiratory infections and 176 and 55, respectively, from children in a community-based study who were healthy or sick with pneumonia.

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Streptococcus pneumoniae strains isolated from 203 episodes of invasive disease in central Australian Aborigines were studied. Capsular types from children aged 0 to 4 years (n = 89) belonged most commonly to types 14, 6B, 9V, 4, 18C, and 19F, which together accounted for 67% of the pediatric strains. In adults (n = 98), types 1, 7F, 3, 4, 12F, and 8 contributed 68% of the isolates.

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Objectives: To document the incidence, case fatality, clinical and demographic features of invasive pneumococcal disease in central Australia.

Design: Invasive isolates from the regional central laboratory were prospectively recorded over five years and case notes retrospectively reviewed. Population denominators were calculated from national Census data from 1986 and 1991.

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The results of this study show that goat blood as a culture medium supplement is as supportive as horse blood for the isolation and identification of Haemophilus influenzae and Streptococcus pneumoniae from clinical material. Care is required in the preparation of goat blood chocolate agar to ensure that a thermolabile growth inhibitor of NAD-dependent Haemophilus species is eliminated.

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When nasopharyngeal secretions from 171 Australian Aboriginal children hospitalized with acute lower respiratory tract infections (ALRI) were cultured selectively for Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae, 136 (79.5%) and 151 (88.3%) children yielded 166 and 254 isolates of S.

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Rates of acquisition and mean duration of nasal carriage of different serotypes of Streptococcus pneumoniae have been estimated by fitting a stochastic model to longitudinal carriage data in children from Papua New Guinea. Immunogenicity and two indices of relative invasiveness were determined for each serotype. Immunogenic serotypes were less frequently acquired and were carried for shorter periods, but no relationship between immunogenicity and invasiveness was apparent using either index of invasiveness.

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An outbreak of serotype 1 Streptococcus pneumoniae infection involving both adults and children occurred in central Australia during the winter months of 1991. Eighteen patients, mainly Aboriginal men, presented with culture-positive serotype 1 bacteraemic pneumonia. In this group, 11 of 12 adults for whom medical records were available were alcohol dependent.

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Acute respiratory infections in children aged less than 5 years in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea were investigated bacteriologically for 10 years from November 1978. Haemophilus influenzae and Streptococcus pneumoniae were responsible for 73% of all bacteria cultured from lung aspirate (83 samples), 85.5% from blood (1024 samples) and 92% from cerebrospinal fluid (155 samples).

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Nasal secretions from Papua New Guinea children were cultured using selective agents, to determine the prevalence of multiple colonization for both S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae.

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Serum concentrations of penicillin were measured in 37 children with pneumonia. The mean serum concentration of penicillin was greater than 1.0 microgram/mL for 11 hours after intramuscular administration of 48,000 U/kg benethamine penicillin compound (nine children), for 26 hours after 48,000 U/kg aqueous procaine penicillin (10 children), and for 40 hours after 79,000 U/kg aqueous procaine penicillin (seven children).

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