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Title: Frequent carriage of Panton-Valentine leucocidin genes by Staphylococcus aureus isolates from surgically drained abscesses. Author: Issartel B, Tristan A, Lechevallier S, Bruyère F, Lina G, Garin B, Lacassin F, Bes M, Vandenesch F, Etienne J. Journal: J Clin Microbiol; 2005 Jul; 43(7):3203-7. PubMed ID: 16000436. Abstract: Between 1 February and 15 April 2002, 95 patients were admitted to Gaston Bourret Territorial Hospital (New Caledonia, France) for drainage of community-acquired soft tissue abscesses. Staphylococcus aureus was detected in 68 cases (72%). Two-thirds of the patients with S. aureus infection had furuncles, which were located on the limbs in 82% of cases. The median interval between symptom onset and hospital admission was 5.7 days. Three-quarters of the patients were Melanesians living in tribes. Fifty-four S. aureus isolates were screened for toxin genes. Panton-Valentine leucocidin (PVL) genes were detected in 48 isolates (89%), the exfoliative toxin A gene was detected in 1 isolate, and no toxin genes were detected in 4 isolates. S. aureus nasal carriage was detected in 39.7% of patients with S. aureus infections. Two infecting S. aureus strains and two nasal carriage strains were resistant to methicillin. Comparative pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, performed in 16 cases, showed that five of six patients with PVL-positive nasal carriage strains were infected by the same strains. In contrast, 8 of 10 patients with PVL-negative nasal carriage strains were infected by PVL-positive strains. PVL genes thus appear to be a major virulence factor in both primary and secondary S. aureus skin infections.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]