Authors
Kåre Mølbak, Dorte Lau Baggesen, Frank Møller Aarestrup, Jens Munk Ebbesen, Jørgen Engberg, Kai Frydendahl, Peter Gerner-Smidt, Andreas Munk Petersen, Henrik C Wegener
Publication date
1999/11/4
Journal
New England Journal of Medicine
Volume
341
Issue
19
Pages
1420-1425
Publisher
Massachusetts Medical Society
Description
Background
Food-borne salmonella infections have become a major problem in industrialized countries. The strain of Salmonella enterica serotype typhimurium known as definitive phage type 104 (DT104) is usually resistant to five drugs: ampicillin, chloramphenicol, streptomycin, sulfonamides, and tetracycline. An increasing proportion of DT104 isolates also have reduced susceptibility to fluoroquinolones.
Methods
The Danish salmonella surveillance program determines the phage types of all typhimurium strains from the food chain, and in the case of suspected outbreaks, five-drug–resistant strains are characterized by molecular methods. All patients infected with five-drug–resistant typhimurium are interviewed to obtain clinical and epidemiologic data. In 1998, an outbreak of salmonella occurred, in which the strain of typhimurium DT104 was new to Denmark. We investigated this outbreak and report our …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
K Mølbak, DL Baggesen, FM Aarestrup, JM Ebbesen… - The New England Journal of Medicine, 1999