澳大利亚土著儿童中耳炎的微生物学:综述。

J Jervis-Bardy, A S Carney, R Duguid, A J Leach
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:回顾有关澳大利亚土著儿童中耳炎多微生物病因的研究,以找出研究空白,并为有效的预防策略和治疗干预措施提供参考:回顾有关澳大利亚土著儿童中耳炎多菌病因的研究,以确定研究差距,并为有效预防策略和治疗干预措施的最佳实践提供信息:方法:文献综述:在所查阅的文献中,对吸出的中耳积液进行的研究只占一小部分。大多数研究依赖于中耳分泌物或鼻咽部的标本。以培养为基础的中耳分泌物研究发现,不可分型的流感嗜血杆菌和肺炎链球菌居多,而在较低比例的样本中分离出的莫拉菌、金黄色葡萄球菌和化脓性链球菌较少。许多研究中都检测到了阿洛伊球菌,但它在中耳炎发病机制中的作用仍存在争议。鼻咽部定植是土著婴儿患中耳炎的一个风险因素,鼻咽部耳道病原体的细菌负荷可预测土著儿童的耳部状况:结论:大多数研究都采用了基于培养的方法和中耳分泌物或鼻咽部标本。这些研究结果与国际文献一致,但依赖培养可能会错误地描述这种疾病的微生物学特征。基因组学技术的进步使微生物学家有能力分析中耳炎土著儿童样本中的整个混合细菌群落("微生物组")。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Microbiology of otitis media in Indigenous Australian children: review.

Objectives: To review research addressing the polymicrobial aetiology of otitis media in Indigenous Australian children in order to identify research gaps and inform best practice in effective prevention strategies and therapeutic interventions.

Methods: Literature review.

Results: Studies of aspirated middle-ear fluid represented a minor component of the literature reviewed. Most studies relied upon specimens from middle-ear discharge or the nasopharynx. Culture-based middle-ear discharge studies have found that non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae and Streptococcus pneumoniae predominate, with Moraxella catarrhalis, Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pyogenes isolated in a lower proportion of samples. Alloiococcus otitidis was detected in a number of studies; however, its role in otitis media pathogenesis remains controversial. Nasopharyngeal colonisation is a risk factor for otitis media in Indigenous infants, and bacterial load of otopathogens in the nasopharynx can predict the ear state of Indigenous children.

Conclusion: Most studies have used culture-based methods and specimens from middle-ear discharge or the nasopharynx. Findings from these studies are consistent with international literature, but reliance on culture may incorrectly characterise the microbiology of this condition. Advances in genomic technologies are now providing microbiologists with the ability to analyse the entire mixed bacterial communities ('microbiomes') of samples obtained from Indigenous children with otitis media.

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