Involvement of Panton-Valentine Leukocidin--Producing Staphylococcus aureus in Primary Skin Infections and Pneumonia
Gérard Lina, Y. Piémont, F. Godail-Gamot et al.
Research Article — Peer-Reviewed Source
Original research published by Lina et al. in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Redistributed under Open Access — see publisher for license terms. MedTech Research Group provides these references for informational purposes. We do not conduct original research. All studies are the work of their respective authors and institutions.
Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) is a cytotoxin that causes leukocyte destruction and tissue necrosis. It is produced by fewer than 5% of Staphylococcus aureus strains. A collection of 172 S. aureus strains were screened for PVL genes by polymerase chain reaction amplification. PVL genes were detected in 93% of strains associated with furunculosis and in 85% of those associated with severe necrotic hemorrhagic pneumonia (all community-acquired). They were detected in 55% of cellulitis strains, 50% of cutaneous abscess strains, 23% of osteomyelitis strains, and 13% of finger-pulp-infection strains. PVL genes were not detected in strains responsible for other infections, such as infective endocarditis, mediastinitis, hospital-acquired pneumonia, urinary tract infection, and enterocolitis, or in those associated with toxic-shock syndrome. It thus appears that PVL is mainly associated with necrotic lesions involving the skin or mucosa.
Full text is available at the publisher.
Read at Publisher| DOI | 10.1086/313461 |
| Journal | Clinical Infectious Diseases |
| Year | 1999 |
| Authors | Gérard Lina, Y. Piémont, F. Godail-Gamot, Michèle Bes, Misha Peter, Valérie Gauduchon, François Vandenesch, Jérôme Étienne |
| License | Open Access — see publisher for license terms |
| Citations | 2,476 |