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Forty Years of Disinfectant Failure: Outbreak of PostinjectionMycobacterium abscessusInfection Caused by Contamination of Benzalkonium Chloride
Author(s) -
Tejpratap Tiwari,
Beverly Ray,
Kenneth Jost,
Minaxi K. Rathod,
Yansheng Zhang,
Barbara A. BrownElliott,
Kate Hendricks,
Richard J. Wallace
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1086/368192
Subject(s) - mycobacterium abscessus , antiseptic , outbreak , benzalkonium chloride , disinfectant , medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , rapd , polymerase chain reaction , veterinary medicine , virology , pathology , mycobacterium , biology , population , tuberculosis , biochemistry , environmental health , gene , genetic diversity
Benzalkonium chloride (BC) continues to be used as an antiseptic and contributes to serious outbreaks of disease. In July 1999, 6 postinjection joint infections caused by Mycobacterium abscessus were reported to the Texas Department of Health (Austin). We investigated this outbreak and identified 12 case patients who had been seen by the same physician and who had received an intra-articular or periarticular steroid injection during the period of 1 April through 31 July 1999. M. abscessus was cultured from either joint fluid or periarticular soft-tissue specimens obtained from 10 patients. We cultured environmental samples, and we compared isolates recovered from case patients with environmental isolates by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and randomly amplified polymorphic DNA polymerase chain reaction (RAPD-PCR). Four environmental samples containing diluted BC yielded M. abscessus. Clinical and environmental strains of M. abscessus were indistinguishable by RAPD-PCR. The case patients' strain was resistant to BC. The use of BC as an antiseptic should be discontinued.

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