2001
DOI: 10.1086/318529
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Results of Molecular Detection ofMycoplasma pneumoniaeamong Patients with Acute Respiratory Infection and in Their Household Contacts Reveals Children as Human Reservoirs

Abstract: During a 30-month prospective study in The Netherlands, the distribution of Mycoplasma pneumoniae and respiratory viruses among 1172 patients with acute respiratory infection (ARI) who were treated in the outpatient general practitioner setting was studied. M. pneumoniae, as detected by polymerase chain reaction analysis, was present in 39 (3.3%) patients. The infection rate was similar in all age groups. Nose and throat samples collected from 79 household contacts of M. pneumoniae-positive index patients reve… Show more

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Cited by 65 publications
(58 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
(11 reference statements)
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“…The usual explanation for such persistence has been that the organism attaches strongly to and invades epithelial cells and that macrolide or tetracycline antibiotics commonly used for treating mycoplasmal infections are bacteriostatic and unable to kill all of the organisms. Surveillance studies using culture and/or PCR indicate that a prolonged asymptomatic carrier state may occur in some persons, providing a reservoir for spread of the organism to others (109,143,162,254). Gnarpe et al (162) demonstrated that 13.5% of 758 healthy volunteers harbored the organism.…”
Section: Geographic Prevalence and Seasonality Of Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The usual explanation for such persistence has been that the organism attaches strongly to and invades epithelial cells and that macrolide or tetracycline antibiotics commonly used for treating mycoplasmal infections are bacteriostatic and unable to kill all of the organisms. Surveillance studies using culture and/or PCR indicate that a prolonged asymptomatic carrier state may occur in some persons, providing a reservoir for spread of the organism to others (109,143,162,254). Gnarpe et al (162) demonstrated that 13.5% of 758 healthy volunteers harbored the organism.…”
Section: Geographic Prevalence and Seasonality Of Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the organisms tend to be associated with desquamated cells, relatively large droplets may be required for transmission, as evidenced by the close personal contact typical of outbreak settings, e.g., schools, military barracks, and institutions. M. pneumoniae infections commonly spread gradually among family members within a household (109,137,403). In view of the intimate contact needed for droplet transmission and the slow (6-h) generation time of M. pneumoniae, 1 to 3 weeks of incubation for each case is typical, and several cycles may be necessary before intrafamily transmission is complete.…”
Section: Disease Transmissionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In 5 to 10% of patients with M. pneumoniae infection, especially young adults, the infection may cause atypical pneumonia (17). Reinfections with M. pneumoniae do occur, but it is unclear whether persistent carriage of mycoplasmas in an immune subject occurs (5,8,13). As M. pneumoniae lacks a cell wall, the commonly described ␤-lactam antibiotics are not effective and adequate laboratory diagnosis is important.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%