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Infección por Mycobacterium bovis en una adolescente con síndrome febril prolongado
Author(s) -
María I Galvagno,
María L Donato,
Mariela Buscio,
Juan Aguirre,
Guadalupe Pérez,
Verónica Ceballos,
Lucrecia Arpí
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
archivos argentinos de pediatría
Language(s) - Spanish
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1668-3501
pISSN - 0325-0075
DOI - 10.5546/aap.2021.e522
Subject(s) - medicine , mycobacterium bovis , zoonosis , tuberculosis , ingestion , mycobacterium tuberculosis , veterinary medicine , pathology
Bovine tuberculosis is an infectious, zoonotic disease, caused by Mycobacterium bovis. The bovine is the primary host. Other species can be infected (pigs, goats, horses, etc). Man can be infected by air (lung disease), clinically indistinguishable from that produced by Mycobacterium tuberculosis or by oral or cutaneous route (extrapulmonary forms: digestive, lymph node, skin). Contagion has been mainly related to contact with livestock and the consumption of unpasteurized dairy products. It was also reported the possible contagion between people. It is described the case of an adolescent patient, from the province of Buenos Aires, with prolonged febrile syndrome and abdominal lymph node conglomerate, with a history of ingestion of unpasteurized milk. We consider the importance of warning about the correct processing of food, especially at this time when new food trends (homemade dairy intake or bought at informal fairs) could put the health of the population at risk.

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