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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 ...
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emedicine.medscape.com/article/216845-overview
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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.
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microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Enterobacter
microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Enterobacter
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Basic description of microbe: ... What it looks like on the agar ... Whole Colony Round...
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www2.truman.edu/~jherrera/microbiology05/eaerogenes.htm
www2.truman.edu/~jherrera/microbiology05/eaerogenes.htm
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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...
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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...
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www.clt.astate.edu/jhuggins/pet_characteristics.htm
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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! ...
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www.angelfire.com/mi/nccc/labwork.html
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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.
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www.annclinlabsci.org/cgi/content/abstract/39/1/55
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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...
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www.anaesthetist.com/icu/infect/bacteria/gramneg/Findex...
www.anaesthetist.com/icu/infect/bacteria/gramneg/Findex.htm
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