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Superbug CRE May Spread And Infect People Without Causing Any Symptoms

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Post time 20-1-2017 11:11 PM | Show all posts |Read mode
Superbug CRE May Spread And Infect People Without Causing Any Symptoms
19 January 2017, 5:35 am EST        By Allan Adamson Tech Times



Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, or CRE, infects about 9,300 people, killing about 600 of them in the United States every year—and more people could be carrying the bacteria without knowing it.

Findings of a new study suggest that the bacteria may spread silently, infecting people without causing any symptoms.

CREs Spreading Stealthily

Researchers have been tracking the family of these superbugs that can resist antibiotics of last resort, but the study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Jan. 16 hints there's much about this class of bacteria that researchers may not yet be aware of.

CREs appear to have more ways of evading antibiotics than what researchers have currently identified. The bacteria may also be spreading more stealthily than current surveillance can detect.

Study researcher William Hanage, from Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, and colleagues collected and genetically sequenced more than 250 CRE isolates that were responsible for diseases in four U.S. hospitals over a 16-month period. The isolates were drawn from patients' blood, respiratory tract, urine samples, and wound.

Eight species of CRE were eventually found at the four hospitals. Researchers found a variety of CRE types within each hospital, and these bacteria span several species with a range of genetic backgrounds and resistance genes.

The numbers and the fact that few of the isolates seem to be genetically related surprised the researchers because these mean that drug-resistance spread faster and more easily between the strains than expected.

Spreading Without Causing Any Symptom

Some of the species did not carry the genes that are known to suppress carbapenems, the antibiotics used to treat infections believed to be caused by multidrug resistant bacteria, but they were able to survive carbapenems, which hint that these pathogens have managed to find a way to avoid these antibiotics that researchers are not yet aware of.

Hanage and colleagues did not also find a clear pattern of transmission for the CRE strains. The resistance appears to be spreading without obvious cases of illness or infection, which could mean transmission happen from one person to another asymptomatically.

"While the typical focus has been on treating sick patients with CRE-related infections, our new findings suggest that CRE is spreading beyond the obvious cases of disease. We need to look harder for this unobserved transmission within our communities and healthcare facilities if we want to stamp it out," Hanage said.

The findings suggest that CREs easily adapt, and the variety with which they appear in the sick may be explained by a possible silent transmission among the healthy. More surveillance that would involve both healthy and sick people to prove this speculation is needed, but if this turns out true, study researchers said it is crucial to reconsider the strategies being used to fight these microbes.

"We provide evidence for considerable asymptomatic carriage and unrecognizable mechanisms of carbapenem resistance that, together, indicate continued innovation by these organisms to thwart the action of this important class of antibiotics and underscore the need for continued surveillance of CRE," the researchers wrote in their study.

http://www.techtimes.com/articles/193380/20170119/superbug-cre-may-spread-and-infect-people-without-causing-any-symptom.htm

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Post time 21-1-2017 12:40 AM | Show all posts
CRE is a major issue in the European hospitals at the moment.
Very expensive to treat and very problematic when it infects
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 Author| Post time 21-1-2017 12:49 AM | Show all posts
ipes2 replied at 20-1-2017 03:40 PM
CRE is a major issue in the European hospitals at the moment.
Very expensive to treat and very prob ...

evolusi....... atau mutasi?  
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Post time 21-1-2017 01:02 AM | Show all posts
Edited by ipes2 at 21-1-2017 01:10 AM
..Atheist.. replied at 21-1-2017 12:49 AM
evolusi....... atau mutasi?

mutation dikatakan yg merangkumi evolution.
bila some dogs started to mutate dan jadi lebih jinak, org org dizaman purba mula menangkap mereka dan membesarkan anak anak anjing tadi di kalangan mereka. anak anak anjing yg mutate ini lalu dikawinkan sesama sendiri, memberi kacukan yang lebih jinak, sebagaimana yang kita lihat dihari ini.

Ini amat berbeza dengan kucing, dimana mereka tidak dikacuk sebegini dan tidak ada mutation utk ''jinak'' di dalam genetic mereka (ambillah anak kucing dari ibunya yg tinggal dgn manusia, dan asing mereka di tempat tanpa manusia..kucing ini akan membesar menjadi ''kucing liar'') (yang saya maksudkan disini ialah Felis catus, ie domestic cat..alah kucing harian kita itu, bukan Panthera tigris ke apa).

Good discussion bro. I suspect, kita pon akan terus evolve, eg kita makin tinggi, tulang makin kecil (kerena kita mula guna akal lebih dari tenaga, tak perlu lagi angkat besi batu berat, guna machine sahaja), badan makin gemuk etc.

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Post time 21-1-2017 01:12 AM | Show all posts
You read well.
I like your reading material.
People who read more will know more..
(..tho it must be said that not necessarily people who
read more will understand more)

Your future threads in Perubatan are most welcome.
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