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Open AccessResearch article

HIV infected adults do not have an excess of colonising bacteria in their large airways

Stephen B Gordon1 email, Janelisa Musaya1 email, Lorna Wilson1 email, Amos Phiri1 email, Eduard E Zijlstra2 email and Malcolm E Molyneux1 email

Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Universities of Malawi and Liverpool, PO Box 30096, Blantyre, Malawi

Department of Medicine, University of Malawi College of Medicine, P O Box 360, Blantyre, Malawi

author email corresponding author email

BMC Infectious Diseases 2003, 3:29doi:10.1186/1471-2334-3-29

Published: 12 December 2003

Abstract

Background

HIV infected adults have increased susceptibility to bacterial pneumonia but the underlying immune defect is poorly understood. We tested the hypothesis that HIV infection might be associated with increased bacterial colonisation of distal airways by nasal flora, which would then predispose patients to bacterial pneumonia.

Methods

Healthy volunteer adults with normal chest radiographs were recruited. Bronchoscopy was carried out and uncontaminated mucosal samples were collected from proximal and distal sites in the large airways using a protected specimen brush. Samples were cultured to detect typical respiratory tract colonising organisms, and the proportion of samples found to contain colonising bacteria compared between HIV infected and uninfected subjects using non-parametric tests.

Results

Forty-nine subjects were studied of whom 27 were HIV infected. Colonising bacteria were identified in the nasopharynx of all subjects including Streptococcus pneumoniae in 6/49 subjects (5 HIV uninfected). Colonising bacteria were found in the distal airway of 6 subjects (3/27 HIV infected vs 3/22 HIV uninfected ; χ2 = 0.07, p = 0.8). Streptococcus pneumoniae was identified in the trachea of all subjects with nasal colonisation but in the distal airway of only 1 subject.

Conclusions

There was no evidence to support a hypothesis of increased airway bacterial colonisation in healthy HIV infected subjects.


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