RT Journal A1 COOPER ML, KELLER HM, WALTERS EW, et al T1 ISolation of enteropathogenic escherichia coli from mothers and newborn infants JF A.M.A. Journal of Diseases of Children JO A.M.A. Journal of Diseases of Children YR 1959 FD March 1 VO 97 IS 3 SP 255 OP 266 DO 10.1001/archpedi.1959.02070010257001 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archpedi.1959.02070010257001 AB Studies by various investigators of infants from whom enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) were isolated reveal that many infants were in the first weeks of life and that the majority had an associated diarrhea. Cathie and MacFarlane1 (1951) studied 264 cases of infantile diarrhea and found E. coli O111:B4 in stool cultures of 16.7% in each of the first two months of life. Shanks and Studzinski2 (1952) studied 158 infants with diarrhea, culturing stools for E. coli 055:B5 and O111:B4, and found these serotypes in 25.0% of infants under 4 weeks of age. Thomson, Watkins, and Gray3 (1956) searched for E. coli O26:B6, 055:B5, and O111:B4 in a group of infants, 77.0% of whom were in the first three months of life, and they found 20 infants (18.0%) harboring one of these three types. In 8 of these 20 infants there was