Fatal infection risk in newborns may increase when this bacterium and fungus mix
medicalxpress.com·4d
🔬Food Microbiology
Preview
Report Post

newborn hand Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Researchers at the University of Maine have discovered that a common interaction between a bacterium and a fungus may significantly increase the risk of severe and potentially fatal infections in newborns, while also making standard treatments less effective.

About one-fifth of healthy people worldwide carry bacteria known as Streptococcus agalactiae (group B strep or GBS) in their bodies, but it can cause serious infections in those who are immunocompromised, including newborns, pregnant women and seniors.

If newborns are exposed to GBS, they can contract meningitis, which can be fatal or cause lifelong neurological complications.

Similar Posts

Loading similar posts...

Keyboard Shortcuts

Navigation
Next / previous item
j/k
Open post
oorEnter
Preview post
v
Post Actions
Love post
a
Like post
l
Dislike post
d
Undo reaction
u
Recommendations
Add interest / feed
Enter
Not interested
x
Go to
Home
gh
Interests
gi
Feeds
gf
Likes
gl
History
gy
Changelog
gc
Settings
gs
Browse
gb
Search
/
General
Show this help
?
Submit feedback
!
Close modal / unfocus
Esc

Press ? anytime to show this help