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Advances in Understanding Kingella kingae

  • Book
  • © 2016

Overview

  • Thorough review of a serious bacteremic disease in young children
  • Details the growing body of information on the epidemiology, transmission, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of K. kingae infections in young children
  • Unique and crucial tool for researchers, pediatric clinicians, and clinical microbiologists alike
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: SpringerBriefs in Immunology (BRIEFSIMMUN)

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Table of contents (8 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This book describes the growing body of information on the epidemiology, clinical manifestations, transmission, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of Kingella kingae infections in young children. In addition, it covers experimental methods that have been developed to study the microbiology, genetics, and virulence factors of K. kingae, information that provides the foundation for new approaches to treatment and prevention of K. kingae disease. With this content in mind, excerpts from the book will be of relevance for clinicians who care for pediatric patients, for clinical microbiologists who are involved in detecting organisms in clinical specimens, and for scientists who are studying K. kingae in an effort to develop novel targets for antimicrobial therapy and new approaches to prevention.

First isolated in the 1960s by Elizabeth O. King, a bacteriologist at the CDC, Kingella kingae was largely ignored over the next two decades as a human pathogen because of its uncommon recovery from patients with disease. However, in recent years K. kingae has been increasingly recognized as a clinically important pathogen in young children, and is currently recognized as the leading cause of osteoarticular infections in young children in a growing number of countries. Research into this organism has grown tremendously over the past 15 years, resulting in a better appreciation of the importance of K. kingae in pediatric patients and of the molecular mechanisms of disease. 

Editors and Affiliations

  • Physician-in-Chief, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, USA

    Joseph W. St. Geme, III

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