Shigella species

Shigella species is a topic covered in the Johns Hopkins ABX Guide.

To view the entire topic, please or .

Official website of the Johns Hopkins Antibiotic (ABX), HIV, Diabetes, and Psychiatry Guides, powered by Unbound Medicine. Johns Hopkins Guide App for iOS, iPhone, iPad, and Android included. Explore these free sample topics:

-- The first section of this topic is shown below --

MICROBIOLOGY

  • Aerobic Gram-negative rod (Fig), non-motile, non-spore-forming), family Enterobacteriaceae.
  • Four groups: subdivided into serotypes and subserotypes based upon lipopolysaccharide O antigenic repeats.
    • Group A (S. dysenteriae, see separate module for discussion of Group A infections, often cause of pandemics arising from natural and man-made disasters)
    • Group B (S. flexneri, leading cause in low- and middle-income countries)
    • Group C (S. boydii, relatively uncommon cause)
    • Group D (S. sonnei, the leading diarrhea cause in high-income countries)
      • An outbreak in the UK and other European countries with XDR S. sonnei. The risk may be MSM, acquired as STD[1][24].
    • >46 serotypes mean low protective immunity develops when exposed to new infections to prevent the next.
  • In clinical microbiology laboratories, MacConkey or EMB agar yields the best growth in addition to Shigella-Salmonella agar.

-- To view the remaining sections of this topic, please or --

MICROBIOLOGY

  • Aerobic Gram-negative rod (Fig), non-motile, non-spore-forming), family Enterobacteriaceae.
  • Four groups: subdivided into serotypes and subserotypes based upon lipopolysaccharide O antigenic repeats.
    • Group A (S. dysenteriae, see separate module for discussion of Group A infections, often cause of pandemics arising from natural and man-made disasters)
    • Group B (S. flexneri, leading cause in low- and middle-income countries)
    • Group C (S. boydii, relatively uncommon cause)
    • Group D (S. sonnei, the leading diarrhea cause in high-income countries)
      • An outbreak in the UK and other European countries with XDR S. sonnei. The risk may be MSM, acquired as STD[1][24].
    • >46 serotypes mean low protective immunity develops when exposed to new infections to prevent the next.
  • In clinical microbiology laboratories, MacConkey or EMB agar yields the best growth in addition to Shigella-Salmonella agar.

There's more to see -- the rest of this topic is available only to subscribers.

Last updated: March 2, 2023