4.6 Editorial Material

Nontuberculous Mycobacteria: Ecology and Impact on Animal and Human Health

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10081516

Keywords

saprophytic mycobacteria; saprozoic mycobacteria; potentially pathogenic mycobacteria; environmental saprophytic mycobacteria; geophagia; natural and human-engineered water systems; estuarine; hydrophobic; aerosolization; surface microlayer; biofilm formation

Categories

Funding

  1. Czech Health Research Council [NU2009-00114]
  2. Czech Science Foundation [21-12719S]

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Non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) are environmentally saprophytic and potentially pathogenic bacteria that can cause serious mycobacterioses. NTM infections mainly come from soil or water sources, including water-borne, air-borne, or water-related infections. NTM can be transmitted through water, air, and soil, and can be found in soil, water aerosols, and dust particles. NTM infections have significant clinical relevance in both humans and animals.
Nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) represent an important group of environmentally saprophytic and potentially pathogenic bacteria that can cause serious mycobacterioses in humans and animals. The sources of infections often remain undetected except for soil- or water-borne, water-washed, water-based, or water-related infections caused by groups of the Mycobacterium (M.) avium complex; M. fortuitum; and other NTM species, including M. marinum infection, known as fish tank granuloma, and M. ulcerans infection, which is described as a Buruli ulcer. NTM could be considered as water-borne, air-borne, and soil-borne pathogens (sapronoses). A lot of clinically relevant NTM species could be considered due to the enormity of published data on permanent, periodic, transient, and incidental sapronoses. Interest is currently increasing in mycobacterioses diagnosed in humans and husbandry animals (esp. pigs) caused by NTM species present in peat bogs, potting soil, garden peat, bat and bird guano, and other matrices used as garden fertilizers. NTM are present in dust particles and in water aerosols, which represent certain factors during aerogenous infection in immunosuppressed host organisms during hospitalization, speleotherapy, and leisure activities. For this Special Issue, a collection of articles providing a current view of the research on NTM-including the clinical relevance, therapy, prevention of mycobacterioses, epidemiology, and ecology-are addressed.

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