Evaluation of the variety of plasmid profiles in S epidermidis isolates from hospital patients and staff.

Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol

Department of Microbiology/Immunology, Oral Roberts University, Tulsa, OK 74137-1297.

Published: October 1988

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plasmid profiling was used to assess the variability of Staphylococcus epidermidis in normal flora to explore its potential for pathogen identification.
  • A total of 726 cultures from hospital staff and patients were analyzed, revealing common similar profiles linked to hand and nares samples, but low probability of matching profiles between different individuals.
  • While a high percentage of isolates from nares contained plasmids, the results indicated that repeated isolation of similar strains from the same person lowered the method’s reliability for confirming infections.

Article Abstract

Plasmid profiling was used to determine the variability of normal flora isolates of Staphylococcus epidermidis in order to evaluate the usefulness of plasmid profiling for identifying pathogens. Fifteen hospital staff members and patients repeatedly had cultures taken from the hands and nares, and multiple isolates were examined for plasmid profiles. S epidermidis isolated from the nares of 15 neonates were also examined. The total number of isolates examined for plasmid profiles was 726. Repetition of profiles was common among the different isolates from a single sampling (one swab). The frequency of re-isolating similar profiles on different days varied from 7% to 13%. Simultaneous isolation of similar profiles from nares and hands on the same individual varied from 0% to 11%, the percentage being lower for personnel. Isolation of the same plasmid profile from different individuals occurred only twice and resulted in an assignment probability of Pa = 0.002 for isolates obtained from different individuals. Significantly more isolates from nares contained plasmids (97%) compared with isolates from hands (89%). Patients who had two or more isolates of coagulase-negative staphylococci with similar profiles were judged, clinically, to have infections in 12 of 13 cases. However, the likelihood of re-isolating an S epidermidis strain with a similar plasmid profile twice from the same person at different times was sufficiently high to prevent plasmid profiling from being used as an absolute criterion for infection.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/645740DOI Listing

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