2 resultados para nitrofurantoin
em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Based on antimicrobial resistance patterns found in Swiss university hospitals, treatment with a third-generation cephalosporin is currently advised for Swiss children with urinary tract infection. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to prospectively assess the susceptibility of Escherichia coli strains isolated from children with symptomatic community-acquired urinary tract infection. METHODS: The antimicrobial susceptibility of E coli strains causing symptomatic community-acquired urinary tract infections was assessed in outpatient children attending the emergency management unit at the Department of Pediatrics, Mendrisio and Bellinzona Hospitals, Switzerland. Strains from children receiving antimicrobial prophylaxis or prescribed antimicrobials in the previous 4 weeks were excluded. Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute methods were used for culture and identification of pathogens. E coli susceptibility testing was performed using the disk diffusion technique. RESULTS: Strains from 100 consecutive outpatient children (73 girls, 27 boys; aged 5 weeks-17 years [median, 33 months]; 100% white) were assessed. High rates of ampicillin and cotrimoxazole resistance (39 and 21 strains, respectively) and low rates of nitrofurantoin resistance (4 strains) were identified. No resistance was identified for coamoxiclav or third-generation cephalosporins. CONCLUSIONS: In these Swiss outpatient children with symptomatic community-acquired urinary tract infection, without antimicrobial prophylaxis or recent prescription of antimicrobials, uropathogenic E coli strains resistant in vitro to ampicillin and cotrimoxazole were common. However, in vitro resistance to nitrofurantoin, coamoxiclav, and third-generation cephalosporins was uncommon.
Resumo:
A total of 72 Lactococcus strains (41 Lactococcus lactis and 31 Lactococcus garvieae) isolated from bovine milk were tested for susceptibility to 17 antibiotics and screened for the presence of antibiotic resistance genes using a microarray. Resistance to tetracycline, clindamycin, erythromycin, streptomycin, nitrofurantoin were found. The tetracycline-resistant L. garvieae and L. lactis harbored tet(M) and tet(S). L. lactis that were resistant to clindamycin were also resistant to erythromycin and possessed the erm(B) gene. The multidrug transporter mdt(A), originally described in L. lactis, was detected for the first time in L. garvieae and does not confer decreased susceptibility to erythromycin nor tetracycline in this species. Mdt(A) of L. garvieae contains one mutation in each antiporter motif C, which is known to play an essential role in drug efflux antiporters. This suggests that the mutations found in the C-motifs of Mdt(A) from L. garvieae may be responsible for susceptibility. The study revealed the presence of antibiotic resistance genes in non-pathogenic and pathogenic lactococci from bovine milk, including a mutated multidrug transporter in L. garvieae.