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Carriage of capsulated strains of Staphylococcus aureus: a population-based study performed in Gulbarga, South India
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 November 2004
Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is a common human pathogen in community- and hospital-acquired infections and its capsule is involved in pathogenesis. We report here the identification of type-5 and type-8 capsular antigens of S. aureus and the prevalence of such strains among volunteers in various age and population groups from different locations in India. S. aureus carriage rates varied between 18 and 50% with the highest values among university students and the lowest in schoolchildren, aged 6–20 years. There was no difference in carriage rates for males vs. females (P=0·415) or in the socioeconomic status of carriers vs. non-carriers or age dependence. Among the carriage isolates 21% were type-5, 52% were type-8 and the remaining 27% were non-typable. Among invasive isolates these percentages were 6, 64 and 30 respectively. This implies that type-5 strains may be less invasive than type-8 strains (P=0·0015).
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- © 2004 Cambridge University Press
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