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  1. Morganella morganii belongs to the tribe Proteeae of the Enterobacteriaceae family. This species is considered as an unusual opportunistic pathogen that mainly causes post-operative wound and urinary tract infections. However, certain clinical M. morganii isolates present resistance to multiple antibiotics by carrying various resistant genes ...

  2. Morganella morganii es una especie bacteriana de la familia Morganellaceae, bacilos gram negativos.Comúnmente habitan en el medio ambiente y el tracto intestinal de humanos, mamíferos y reptiles como flora saprofita y ocasionalmente causantes de infecciones urinarias y otras infecciones nosocomiales.Son sensibles a terapias antibióticas con la excepción de los betalactámicos.

  3. 29 de jun. de 2022 · Abstract. Although recent reports of extensively antibiotic-resistant strains have highlighted the importance of Morganella morganii as an emerging pathogen, the epidemiology of serious infections due to this organism is not well defined. The objective of this study was to determine the incidence, determinants, and outcomes of Morganella ...

  4. 1 de sept. de 2016 · Morganella morganii is a facultative anaerobic rod Gram-negative enteric bacterium, which was first isolated in 1906 by Morgan et al. from a pediatric fecal culture. 1 The genome size of M. morganii is about 4,000,000 bp, and the number of its protein-coding sequences (CDSs) is about 4,000. 2M. morganii was formerly classified as Proteus ...

  5. Morganella are motile, non-lactose fermenting gram-negative bacteria, which share with Proteus the capacity for urease production and presence of phenylalanine deaminase. They can be separated from Proteus species by the lack of swarming activity or gelatin liquefaction or H2S production.

  6. The bacterial genus Morganella should not be confused with the fungal genus of the same name. Genus Proteus contains rod-shaped bacteria that inhabit soil and water. Species in the genus produce urease. The genus contains three opportunistic pathogens that are sometimes found in the human intestinal tract: ...

  7. 29 de mar. de 2022 · Keywords: bacterial infections, children, community‐acquired, Morganella morganii, urinary tract infection In this prospective study, urinary tract infections (UTIs) caused by M. morganii among children had good responses to third generation cephalosporins antibiotic therapy.