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  Česky / Czech version Epidemiol. Mikrobiol. Imunol., 48, 1999, č. 2, s. 47–51
 
Kubín M., Havelková M., Hynčicová I., Mezenský L., Sklenář V., Kremer K., van Soolingen D.: Microepidemic of Tuberculosis in the South Moravian Region 
Kubín M. 1 , Havelková M. 1 , Hynčicová I. 1 , Mezenský L. 2 , Sklenář V. 2 , Kremer K. 3 , van Soolingen D. 

 


Summary:

       In the South Moravian region which is the area with the lowest prevalence of bacillary tuberculosis in the Czech Republic (6.6 per 100 000 population in 1996) in 1993–1996 a total of six local and family microepidemics of tuberculosis were detected. For their identification the RFLP fingerprinting method was used based on evidence of repeated sequence of IS6110 in the chromosomal DNA of the examined strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis predigested with restrictive enzyme PvuII. The profiles of fingerprints of each microepidemic were included by means of a computer programme into the hierarchy of the fingerprint dendrogram of 184 strains of M. tuberculosis which made it possible to identify possible identical profiles of strains from patients from remote places in the Czech Republic. In three family microepidemics involving always two members no identical fingerprint profiles of other Czech strains of M. tuberculosis were revealed. To the fourth cluster formed by six members of one family an identical RFLP profile of a female patient living in a nearby locality was added. In another microepidemic recorded in three brothers identical fingerprints were found another four patients from the South Moravian region and in one from the Central Bohemian region. The last cluster of two brothers was surprisingly enlarged by six identical RFLP profiles of patients from the West Bohemian region and one from Prague. These findings suggest that in areas with a low prevalence tuberculosis persists more frequently than in areas with a high prevalence as familial or local microepidemics.

        Key words: Mycobacterium tuberculosis – South Moravian region – microepidemic of tuberculosis.
       

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