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Molecular Virology: Tables of Antimicrobial Factors and Microbial Contaminants in Human Milk
Selected bibliography to tables - Table 5

  • Abrahamsen TG., Finne PH., and Lingaas E. (1989) Flavobacterium meningosepticum infections in neonatal intensive care unit. Acta Paediatr. Scand., 78, 51-55.
  • Behari P., Englund J. Alcasid G., Garcia-Hochins S., and Weber SG. (2004) Transmission of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in preterm infants through breast milk. Infect. Control Hosp. Epidemiol., 25, 778-780.
  • Botsford KB., Weinstein RA., Boyer KM., Nathan C., Carman M., and Paton JB., (1986). Gram-negative bacilli in human milk feedings: Quantitation and clinical consequences for premature infants. J. Pediatrics, 109, 707-710.
  • Boo N-Y, Nordiah AJ., Alfizah H., Nor-Rohaini AH., and Lim VKE. (2001). Contamination of breast milk obtained by manual expression and breast milk pumps in mothers of very low birthweight infants. J. Hosp. Infection, 49, 274-281.
  • Carrol L., Osman M., Davies DP., and McNeish AS. (1979) Bacteriological criteria for feeding raw breast-milk to babies on neonatal units. Lancet, ii, 732-733.
  • D'Amico CJ., DiNardo CA., and Krystofiak SK. (2003). Preventing contamination of breast pump kit attachments in the NICU. J. Perinat. Neonat. Nurs. 17, 150-157.
  • Donowitz LG., Marsik FJ., Fisher KA., and Wenzel RP. (1981) Contaminated breast milk: A source of Klebsiella bacteremia in a newborn intensive care unit. Rev. Infect. Dis. 3, 716-720.
  • El-Mohandes AE., Schatz V., Kleiser JF., and Jackson BJ.(1993) Bacterial contaminants of collected and frozen human milk used in a intensive care nursery. American J. Infect. Control, 21, 226-230.
  • Gangneux J-P., Lavarde D., Bretagne S., Guiguen C., and Gandemer V. (2002) Transient aspergillus antigenaemia: Think of milk. Lancet, 359, 1251.
  • Garg AK., Pejaver RK., Al Hifzi I. (1995) Safety of expressed milk. J. Infection, 31, 247-48.
  • Godambe S., Shah PS., and Shah V. (2005) Breast milk as a source of late onset neonatal sepsis. Pediatr. Infect Dis. J., 24, 381-382.
  • Graham JC., Morgan S., Ford M., Gould FK., and Bolton DT. (1999) Sepsis and ECMO: beware the breast milk. J. Hosp. Infection, 43, 75-76.
  • Gransen WR, Webster M., French GL., and Phillips I. (1986) An outbreak of Serratia marcescens transmitted by contaminated breast pumps in an special care baby unit. J. Hosp. Infection, 7, 149-154.
  • Hewitt JH. (1981) Possible bacteriological hazards associated with the use of raw (unheated) human milk for special care infants. International Institute of Refrigeration, 2, 99-106.
  • Law BJ., Urias BA., Lertzman J., Robson D., and Romance L. (1989) Is expressed milk-associated bacteria in premature infants fed raw human milk controlled by routine bacteriologic screening? J. Clin. Micro. 27, 1560-1566.
  • Lemoine L. (1987) Possible transmission of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus by expressed human milk. J. Hosp. Infection, 9, 93-94.
  • Levy J., Van Laethem Y., Verhaegen G., Perpete C., Butzler J-P., and Wenzel RP. (1988) Contaminated enteral nutrition solutions as a cause of nosocomial bloodstream infection: A study using plasmid fingerprinting. J. Parental. Enteral. Nutrit., 13, 228-234.
  • Macrae MB., Shannon KP., Rayner DM., Kaiser AM., Hoffman PN., and French GL. (2001) A simultaneous outbreak on a neonatal unit of two strains of antibiotic resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae controllable only by ward closure. J. Hosp. Infection, 49, 183-192.
  • Moloney AC., Quoraishi AH., Parry P., and Hall V. (1987) A bacteriological examination of breast milk pumps. J. Hosp. Infection, 9, 169-174.
  • Ng, DK., Lee SYR., Leung LCK., Wong SF., and Ho JCS. (2004) Bacteriological screening of expressed breast milk revealed a high rate of bacterial contamination in Chinese women. J. Hosp. Infect., 58, 146-150.
  • Ng PC., Lewindon PJ., Siu YK., Wong W., Cheung KL., and Liu K. (1995) Bacterial contaminated breast milk and necrotizing enterocolitis in preterm twins. J. Hosp. Infection, 31, 105-110.
  • Ryder RW., Crosby-Richie A., McDonough B., and Hall WJ. (1977) Human milk contaminated with Salmonella kottbus. A cause of nosicomal illness in infants. JAMA, 238, 1533-1534.
  • Stiver HG., Albritton WL., Clarke J., Friesen P., and White FMM. (1977) Nosocomal colonization and infection due to E. coli 0125:K70 epidemiologically linked to expressed breast-milk feedings. Canadian J. Public Health, 68, 479-482.
  • Thom AR., Cole AP., Watrastewicz K. (1970) Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in a neonatal nursery, possibly transmitted by a breast-milk pump. Lancet, i, 560-561.
  • Youssef RF., Darcy E., and Barone A. (2002). Expressed breast milk as a source of neonatal sepsis. Ped. Inf. Dis. J. 21, 888-889.

Content approved by: Dr John May
Page maintained by: Craig Lighton
Last updated: 28 September, 2005



Molecular Virology

Related Links

Table 1
Table 2
Table 3
Table 4
Table 5

Bibliography

Table 6
Table 7
Milk in the News


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