48 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2017
    1. Almost all isolates of S. marcescens secrete a pore-forming haemolysin, ShIA, that is associated with cell cytotoxicity and the release of inflammatory mediators. This cytotoxin is thought to assist in tissue penetration (43) and may be linked to the expression of an extensive host invasive pathogenic pathway involving bacterial swarming and quorum sensing (58, 61).

      toxin

    2. Results from a recent surveillance programme in the US and Europe, indicate that Serratia spp., accounts for an average of 6.5% of all Gram negative infection in Intensive Care Units (ranked 5th amongst Gram negative organisms in ICU) and an average of 3.5% in non-ICU patients (91). Currently Serratia is the seventh most common cause of pneumonia with an incidence of 4.1% in the US, 3.2% in Europe and 2.4% in Latin America (51), and the tenth most common cause of bloodstream infection with an incidence of 2.0% amongst hospitalized patients (2).

      prevalence

    3. S. marcescensare uniformly resistant to a wide range of antibiotics including narrow-spectrum-penicillins and cephalosporins, cefuroxime, cephamycins, macrolides, tetracycline, nitrofurantoin and colistin

      antibiotic resistance

    1. The important reservoirs in epidemics are the digestive tract, the respiratory tract, the urinary tracts and the perineum of neonates and the artificial nails of adults and health care workers.

      reservoirs of the bacteria

    1. S. marcescens may survive from 3 days to 2 month on dry, inanimate surfaces, and 5 weeks on dry floor Footnote 16. The organism may survive less than 4 days in a blood bag under aerobic conditions and 20 days in semi-anaerobic/anaerobic conditions Footnote 17. It has been also reported to survive in contact lens disinfectant (with chlorheximide), double-distilled water, non-medicated hand soap, but no duration has been reported for those cases Footnote 18-Footnote 20.

      survivance outside of the host

    2. The latter bacteria produce biofilms, which only consist of microcolonies of undifferentiated cells. Serratia spp. also produces β-lactamases

      Difference between biofilms of S. marcescens and p. aeruginosa and E. coli

  2. www.life.umd.edu www.life.umd.edu
    1. Most S. marcescens strains are resistant to several antibiotics because of the presence of R-factors, which are a type of plasmid that carry one or more genes that encode resistance; all are considered intrinsically resistant to ampicillin, macrolides, and first-generation cephalosporins (such as cephalexin)

      Antibiotic Resistance

    2. S. marcescens is a motile organism and can grow in temperatures ranging from 5–40 °C and in pH levels ranging from 5 to 9. It is differentiated from other Gram-negative bacteria by its ability to perform casein hydrolysis, which allows it to produce extracellular metalloproteinases which are believed to function in cell-to-extracellular matrix interactions. S. marcescens also exhibits tryptophan and citrate degradation.

      Growth in Lab