Abstract
Enteritis caused by Y. enterocolitica appears to be an uncommon occurrence in the USA. Most of the reported cases have been caused by biochemically typical Y. enterocolitica serotype O:8, the most frequently encountered serotype in the USA. The isolation of 2 biochemically and serologically unusual Y. enterocolitica isolates from a patient with acute enteritis was described. One strain was distinguished by the rapid fermentation of rhamnose and raffinose and by citrate utilization at 22.degree. C but not at 37.degree. C. The other isolate was sucrose negative and at either temperature it lacked the fermentative capability for rhamnose and raffinose and the ability to utilize sodium citrate. Neither strain was agglutinable with known Y. enterocolitica antisera. The rhamnose-positive isolate showed an increased resistance to ampicillin, cephalothin, colymycin and penicillin when tested at 22.degree. C as compared to results obtained at 37.degree. C. The demonstration that 1 patient''s serum contained agglutinins (1:64) against the sucrose-negative strain supports its etiological significance. The role of the rhamnose-positive strain in the patient''s illness is speculative. It conceivably could have potentiated the pathogenicity of the sucrose-negative isolate.