Also known as Streptococcus agalactiae, group B streptococcus is a pathogen that causes a variety of infectious syndromes. It colonizes the human GI tract and causes infection usually through a breach of the epithelial barriers.
In pregnant women it can cause choramnionitis and post-partum endometritis. In the neonate, it is a significant cause of neonatal sepsis and meningitis and this is why women are screened for carriage and given peri-partum antibiotics.
In the non-pregnant adult, it is commonly associated with:
- Bacteremia without focus (~40-50%)
- Skin/soft tissue infections (~20%)
- Pneumonia (~10-15%)
- Osteomyeltis or Septic Arthtitis (~10-15%)
- Other (Endocarditis, Peritonitis, Meningitis)
Treatment includes a beta-lactam antibiotic (vancomycin in the penicillin allergic) pending sensitivities to other agents like the quinolones or clindamycin. GBS is universally penicillin sensitive at present. Source control is also important.
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