First report of Kingella kingae infection in a paediatric population in Accra, Ghana
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PAMJ
Abstract
Introduction: Kingella kingae is recognized as a
frequent source of childhood bacteremia and the
commonest agent of skeletal system infections in
children 6 months - 4 years old. Several factors,
including difficulty in detecting this fastidious
organism in routine laboratory assays, result in
underdiagnosis of the infections. Species-specific
nucleic acid amplification assays, however,
significantly improve the detection of K. kingae in
blood samples. The aim of this study was to detect
K. kingae infection in young children in Accra,
Ghana. Methods: a cross-sectional based study was
carried out in three hospitals in Accra. Children with febrile illness and directed by a clinician for blood
culture were recruited. Blood samples collected
were analysed by culture and polymerase chain
reaction (PCR), using universal prokaryotic and K.
kingae rtxA primers. Results: blood samples from
232 children (mean age 20.10 ± 12.57 months) were
analysed. Bacteremia (72.4%) was the highest
clinical diagnosis particularly in the 12-24 months
age group. Only 7 (3.1%) samples showed bacterial
growth and were negative for Kingella. PCR with
universal prokaryotic primers succeeded in 223
(96.1%) out of 232 samples. PCR with K. kingae rtxA
toxin primers was positive for 12 (5.4%) samples, all
diagnosed as bacteremia, out of the 223 samples.
Eleven (91.7%) out of the 12 K. kingae PCR positives
were culture-negative. Conclusion: Kingella kingae
was detected only by PCR specific for the K. kingae
rtxA toxin. Kingella kingae may be a potential cause
of bacteremia and hence febrile illness in young
children living in Accra, Ghana.
Description
Research Article