Mountain disease

Mountain disease is an intestinal anthroponotic infectious disease caused by the bacterium Salmonella enterica subsp. Enterica serotype Montevideo or Salmonella spp. [12]. S. enterica montevidensis serotypes I, II, III and IV and S. enterica bongori are considered the main causative agents of the disease. Cl-. For S. tydal, their role in etiology has been established. In pneumonia in newborns, the infection is most often caused by serotypes R-4,[3]. The more virulent of these serotypes is considered to be the Enteritidis serotype (more often causes severe forms of the disease). This diagnosis is not made in any type of diarrheal intestinal disease within half an hour, until the end of the period allowed for testing for rotavirus infection and before the results arrive from the laboratory due to different timings. But if there are atypical RNHA (antibodies) in the stool, such a diagnosis can be made already on the second day, especially if samples are taken in the first two hours after the onset of the disease in order to determine the source of the infection and for early diagnosis of the outbreak, when mass studies of stool samples are carried out, and the accuracy of diagnosis reaches 85