Staphylococcus aureus resistente a meticilina asociado a la comunidad (SARM-AC): comunicación de los primeros cuatro casos pediátricos descritos en Hospital de Niños Roberto del Río

REVISTA CHILENA DE INFECTOLOGIA(2015)

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Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is a known pathogen in pediatric patients that produces skin infections, cutaneous abscess, cellulitis and osteoarticular infections. Most of these infections are produced by a meticilin susceptible strain. The community associated methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus was published for the first time in 1993, ever since then is has been recognized as a cosmopolite pathogen. The first report in Latin America was published in 2003, and in Chile in 2008 from adult patients that have reported traveling to other countries. The following series describes four pediatric cases, all school-aged children, diagnosed since 2012 with clinical followups and molecular studies. Two cases presented as osteomyelitis of the lower extremity; and one presented as arm cellulitis. These three cases had Panton Valentine leukocidine (PV-L) negative strains from the clone complex 8. The last case presented a renal abscess, the strain was PV-L positive from the clone complex 30. This case series constitutes the first pediatric case report in Chile.
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Key words
Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus,community associated,pediatric cases,multilocus sequence typing
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