- Staphylococcus saprophyticus
Taxobox
color = lightgrey
name = "Staphylococcus saprophyticus"
regnum = Bacteria
phylum =Firmicutes
classis =Cocci
ordo =Bacillales
familia =Staphylococcaceae
genus = "Staphylococcus "
species = "S. saprophyticus"
binomial = "Staphylococcus saprophyticus"
binomial_authority = (Fairbrother 1940)
Shaw "et al." 1951"Staphylococcus saprophyticus" is a
coagulase -negative species of "Staphylococcus " bacteria. "S. saprophyticus" is often implicated inurinary tract infection s. "S. saprophyticus" is resistant to the antibioticNovobiocin , a characteristic that is used in laboratory identification to distinguish it from "S. epidermidis", which is also coagulase- negative.The organism is rarely found in healthy humans but is commonly isolated from animals and their carcasses.
It is implicated in 10-20% of
urinary tract infection s (UTI). In females between the ages of ca. 17-27 it is the second most common cause of UTIs. It may also reside in the urinary tract and bladder of sexually active females. "S. saprophyticus" isphosphatase -negative,urease andlipase positive.Some of the symptoms of this bacteria are burning sensation when passing urine, the urge to go to the toilet more often than usual, the 'dripping effect' after urination, weak bladder, bloated feeling with sharp razor pains in the lower abdomen around the bladder and ovary areas and razor-like pains during sexual intercourse.
=Background=Until the last decade, coagulase-negative staphylococci occurring in urine specimens were usually regarded as a contaminant. In the early 1970s, i.e., more than ten years after the original demonstration of Staphylococcus saprophyticus in urine specimens, this species became recognized as a frequent cause of urinary tract infections (UTI). In young women, S. saprophyticus is, after Escherichia coli, the second-most-frequent causative agent of acute UTI. Patients with UTI caused by S. saprophyticus usually present with symptomatic cystitis. Signs and symptoms of renal involvement are also often registered. The urine sediment of a patient with UTI caused by S. saprophyticus has a characteristic appearance microscopically. Chemical screening methods for bacteriuria do not always succeed in diagnosing UTI caused by S. saprophyticus. Even when such an infection occurs above the neck of the bladder, low numbers of colony-forming units (less than 10(5) cfu/ml) of S. saprophyticus are comparatively often found in the bladder and voided urine. S. saprophyticus is usually susceptible to antibiotics commonly prescribed for patients with UTI, with the exception of nalidixic acid. The bacterium has a capacity for selective adherence to human urothelium. It causes direct hemagglutination. The adhesin for S. saprophyticus is a lactosamine structure. This staphylococcal species produces an extracellular enzyme complex that can inhibit growth of both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria.
Quinolones are commonly used in treatment of "S. saprophyticus" urinary tract infections.
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