Enterobacter aerogenes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Enterobacter aerogenes is a Gram-negative, oxidase negative, catalase positive, citrate positive, indole negative, rod-shaped bacterium. E. aerogenes is a nosocomial and pathogenic bacterium that...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterobacter_aerogenes
Overview: Enterobacter species, particularly Enterobacter cloacae and Enterobacter aerogenes, are important nosocomial pathogens responsible for various infections, including bacteremia, lower respiratory tract infections, skin and soft-tissue infections, urinary tract infections (UTIs), endocarditis, intra-abdominal ...
emedicine.medscape.com/article/216845-overview
Some symptoms of Enterobacter infections include bacteremia, lower respiratory tract infections, skin infections, soft tissue infections, urinary tract infections, UTI, endocarditis, intraabdominal infections, septic arthritis, osteomyelitis, and ophthalmic infections.
microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Enterobacter microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Enterobacter
Basic description of microbe: ... What it looks like on the agar ... Whole Colony Round...
www2.truman.edu/~jherrera/microbiology05/eaerogenes.htm www2.truman.edu/~jherrera/microbiology05/eaerogenes.htm
Enterobacter aerogenes is a Gram negative rod-shaped bacterium in the same family as Esherichia coli. It can grow on many of the same selective media as Esherichia coli, including: MacConkey Agar, EMB agar and Lauryl-Tryptose broth. E. aero...
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_do_you_identify_enterobac...
Pet report instructions: ... Bacterial Characteristics Sheet ... Enterobacter aerogenes: gram negative, short rods, motile; purple/pink pigment on EMB and is a lactose fermenter, urease negative, citrate positive...
www.clt.astate.edu/jhuggins/pet_characteristics.htm
Below are some of the tests we do to distinguish E. coli and E. aerogenes. Note how clearly they differ when we use biochemistry to tell them apart! ...
www.angelfire.com/mi/nccc/labwork.html
We investigated the qepA gene in 573 AmpC-producing Enterobacteriaceae including one Citrobacter freundii known to harbor rmtB. Of them, two clonally unrelated E. aerogenes harbored qepA. Both isolates co-harbored rmtB, qnrS1, qepA, and blaLAP-1 on an IncFI type plasmid.
www.annclinlabsci.org/cgi/content/abstract/39/1/55
There are several Enterobacter species, but E. cloacae and to a lesser degree, E. aerogenes, are the commonest pathogens. ... Pinkish colonies of Enterobacter aerogenes growing on MacConkey agar ... Mucoid-looking almost iridescent Enterobacter aerogenes growing on EMB agar...
www.anaesthetist.com/icu/infect/bacteria/gramneg/Findex... www.anaesthetist.com/icu/infect/bacteria/gramneg/Findex.htm