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Volume 13, Number 4—April 2007
Dispatch

MRSA Transmission between Cows and Humans

Éva Juhász-Kaszanyitzky*, Szilárd Jánosi*, Pál Somogyi*, Ádám Dán*, Linda vanderGraaf van Bloois†‡, Engeline van Duijkeren‡, and Jaap A. Wagenaar†‡
Author affiliations: *Central Veterinary Institute, Budapest, Hungary; †Animal Sciences Group, Lelystad, the Netherlands; ‡Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands;

Main Article

Table

Susceptibility of human and animal Staphylococcus aureus strains to phages and the presence of mecA by PCR*

Strain no.†Reference no.Identification of samplesmecAMRSA 100× RTD‡*
1
13535
795 LF
+
616/617/623/626/630
2
16480
588 RF
+
616/617/623/626/630
3
24069/2
490 RF
+
616/617/623/626/630
4
24069/4
723 RH
+
616/617/623/626/630
5
24069/13
1572 LF
+
616/617/623/626/630
6
30195
632 RF
+
616/617/623/626/630
7
23457
1379 LH
+
616/617/623/626/630

29509†
540 RH
+
616/617/623/626/630
8
Human/3

+
616/617/623/626/630
9
24069/9
381 LF


10
24069/10
429 LH


11
24069/11
519 LH


12
24069/15
2551 RH


13
Human/4



14Human/2

*Strains isolated from cows with subclinical mastitis, Hungary, January 2002–December 2004.
†See Figure for DNA analysis. Strain no. 29509 was not included in the DNA analysis; thus, no strain no. was assigned.
‡Reaction pattern with 100× routine test dilution (RTD) methicillin-resistant Staphyloccocus aureus phages (7). +, positive in mecA PCR; –,
negative in mecA PCR.

Main Article

References
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