Journal ArticleOpen Access
Complexity of rice-water stool from patients with <i>Vibrio cholerae</i> plays a role in the transmission of infectious diarrhea
Author Affiliations
Tufts University, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Harvard University, ...
Published InProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Year2007
Citations75
Abstract
At the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, one-half of the rice-water stool samples that were culture-positive for Vibrio cholerae did not contain motile V. cholerae by standard darkfield microscopy and were defined as darkfield-negative (DF(-)). We evaluated the host and microbial factors associated with DF status, as well as the impact of DF status on transmission. Viable counts of V. cholerae in DF(-) stools were three logs lower than in DF(+) stools, although DF(-) and DF(+) stools had similar direct counts of V. cholerae by microscopy. In DF(-) samples, non-V. cholerae bacteria outnumbered V. cholerae 10:1. Lytic V. cholerae bacteriophage were present in 90% of DF(-) samples compared with 35% of DF(+) samples, suggesting that bacteriophage may limit…
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