Article
Staphylococcus haemolyticus disseminated among neonates with bacteremia in a neonatal intensive care unit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Registro en:
PEREIRA, Paula Marcele Afonso et al. Staphylococcus haemolyticus disseminated among neonates with bacteremia in a neonatal intensive care unit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease, v.78, n.1, p.85-92, jan. 2014.
0732-8893
10.1016/j.diagmicrobio.2013.06.026
Autor
Pereira, Paula Marcele Afonso
Binatti, Vanessa Batista
Sued, Bruna Pinto Ribeiro
Ramos, Juliana Nunes
Peixoto, Renata Stavracakis
Simões, Cláudio
Castro, Eduardo Almeida de
Duarte, José Luís Muniz Bandeira
Vieira, Verônica Viana
Hirata Jr., Raphael
Santos, Kátia Regina Netto
Guaraldi, Ana Luíza Mattos
Pereira, José Augusto Adler
Resumen
Oxacillin-resistant Staphylococcus haemolyticus (ORSH) was found as the most prevalent (77.5%) species of coagulase-negative staphylococci associated with bacteremia in neonates making use of intravenous catheters in an intensive care unit of a Brazilian teaching hospital. Thirty-one blood isolates were confirmed as S. haemolyticus by sequencing of the 16S and clustered in 6 pulsed-field gel electrophoresis types (with 58% of the strains belonging to 2 predominant types B and D). S. haemolyticus was mostly oxacillin-resistant (90.3%) displaying multiresistance profiles (70.4%). However, the mecA gene was undetected in 22.6% strains. ORSH exhibited slime production on Congo-Red agar (67.7%), adherence to polystyrene (96.7%), and glass (87%) surfaces. Interestingly, ica-operon was detected in 58% strains, mostly belonging to the B, D, and F genotypes, which is a significantly higher percentage when compared to other studies conducted at different parts of the globe. Data indicated that ica operon and biofilm-forming ORSH are endemic in Brazilian nosocomial environment.