PEDIATRICS Vol. 35 No. 3 March 1965, pp. 393-404
This Article
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow P3Rs: Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when P3Rs are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow E-mail this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Add to My File Cabinet
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via CrossRef
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Markowitz, M.
Right arrow Articles by Cluff, L. E.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by Markowitz, M.
Right arrow Articles by Cluff, L. E.

THE BACTERIOLOGIC FINDINGS, STREPTOCOCCAL IMMUNE RESPONSE, AND RENAL COMPLICATIONS IN CHILDREN WITH IMPETIGO

Milton Markowitz M.D.1, H. David Bruton M.D.1, Ann G. Kuttner M.D.1, and Leighton E. Cluff M.D.1

1 Streptococcal Disease Laboratory, Department of Pediatrics, Sinai Hospital; the Harriet Lane Home Service and Department of Pediatrics, Children's Medical and Surgical Center; and the Department of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins Hospital

1. Cultures of the skin, nares, and pharynx were examined in 303 children with impetigo. One hundred and seventy-two skin cultures were positive: 50 for beta hemolytic streptococci, 104 for coagulasepositive staphylococci, and 18 for both organisms. Beta hemolytic streptococci were present in nasopharyngeal cultures of 26 children, 18 of whom also had these organisms in the skin. Staphylococci were found in 114 cultures of the nares and in 58 children these bacteria were also present in the skin culture.

2. Of the 68 strains of beta hemolytic streptococci cultured from the skin, 53 were group A, one was group C, and 14 could not be grouped.

3. Only 4 of the group A strains were typable by the precipitin reaction. None of the strains were known nephrotoxic types. Twenty-one strains were typed by slide agglutination: 20 showed agglutination patterns considered to be characteristic of impetigo strains.

4. Twenty-five of 68 children with streptococci in the skin lesion had an elevated ASO titer. In 76 children with negative skin cultures, there was serologic evidence of streptococcal infection. On the basis of combined bacteriologic and serologic findings, 144 children (48%) with impetigo had evidence of streptococcal infection.

5. Ninety-nine of the 122 strains of staphylococci isolated from the skin and 86 of 114 strains cultured from the nose were phage-typed. Phage-type 71 was the most common typable strain from both sources.

6. At the first visit, 6 children had acute glomerulonephritis and 8 had microscopic hematuria. An additional 14 patients showed transient hematuria on follow-up examination.

7. The group of children with pure cultures of streptococci who received penicillin appeared to improve more rapidly than those who received only local treatment. On the other hand, in patients with mixed cultures of streptococci and staphylococci as well as those with pure cultures of staphylococci, there was no difference in response in those given penicillin as cornpared with those treated with ammoniated mercury.

8. In 5 children, microhematuria was not prevented by the administration of penicilun 7 to 10 days before the appearance of the abnormal urinary findings.

9. The strains of group A streptococci isolated from skin lesions showed several distinctive patterns by the slide agglutination technique similar to those observed by other workers. Also in accord with English investigators, one phage-type of staphylococcal predominated in the strains isolated from the skin lesions.

10. Abnormal urinary findings are cornmon in children with impetigo, but are usually not associated with infection with the known nephrotoxic types of group A streptococci.

Submitted on August 19, 1964
Accepted on November 18, 1964




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
CLIN PEDIATRHome page
M.K. Chandrasekhara and D. Cornfeld
Concomitant Rheumatic Fever and Acute Glomerulonephritis
Clinical Pediatrics, February 1, 1969; 8(2): 110 - 114.
[Abstract] [PDF]