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      Antimicrobial resistance of clinical and environmental strains of Vibrio cholerae isolated in Lima-Peru during epidemics of 1991 and 1998

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          Abstract

          The susceptibility in vitro of 71 isolations of V. cholerae was evaluated: 24 of clinical origin and 47 strains of clinical and environmental origin collected in the epidemic of 1991 and during the outbreak epidemic of 1998 in Lima-Peru respectively. The biochemical and serological tests carried out established that 43 (60,6%) corresponded to the serogroup O1 Ogawa of the 1998 epidemic; 26 (36.6%) were of the serotype Inaba, being 24 of them isolated in 1991. Two strains did not belong to the serogroup O1. By means of disk diffusion method and Minimal Inhibitory Concentration (MIC), 15 strains with multi-resistance to antibiotics were determined, 10 of which were of clinical origin and 5 of natural origin, showing 9 antibiotypes with different resistance pattern. The evaluation of susceptibility in front of the vibriostatic agent O/129, demonstrated that 11.4% of the strains, collected in 1998, presented resistance to a concentration of 150 µg. A direct relationship among the resistance that presented the strains of clinical and environmental origin isolated in 1991 and 1998 was established as much for tetracycline, sulfa/trimethoprim and 0/129; 88.6% of the clinical strains of the year 1998 presented resistance to these three drugs, while 100% of clinical strains isolated in 1991 were sensitive to O/129 (150 µg), sulfa/trimethoprim and tetracycline. We conclude that V. cholerae O1 has increased its resistance to antimicrobial drugs of clinical use in the same way it is also losing susceptibility to the vibriostatic compound O/129 for what their use is not recommended for taxonomic purposes.

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          Bergey's Manual of Determinative Bacteriology

          Based on the data contained in the four-volume Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology, BMDB-9 also includes new genera and species, new combinations, and new taxa published through the January 1992 issue of the IJSB. Users will find short general descriptions that encompass all organisms by Groups; shape and size, Gram reaction, other pertinent morphological features, motility and flagella, relations to oxygen, basic type of metabolism, carbon and energy sources, habitat and ecology. BMDB-9 also includes discussions of difficulties in identification, keys or tables to genera and species, genus descriptions, synonyms, other nomenclatural changes, and numerous illustrations.
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            Global climate change and infectious diseases.

            S K Shuman (2010)
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              CAPD peritonitis. Incidence, pathogens, diagnosis, and management.

              M Saklayen (1990)
              Peritonitis is a frequent complication of CAPD. Sixty percent of all patients on CAPD will have at least one episode of peritonitis during the first year of this mode of dialysis. Most of the episodes of peritonitis are caused by touch contamination of the dialysis tubing or by extension of the catheter exit site or tunnel infection. Coagulase-negative and coagulase-positive Staphylococcus are the two most common organisms, accounting for 50% or more of all CAPD peritonitis. Other gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria and fungi account for the rest. Intraperitoneal antibiotic treatments are usually effective in eradicating the infection. The choice of antibiotics depends on organisms isolated from cultured dialysate. Fungal peritonitis and, occasionally, Pseudomonas peritonitis require removal of the catheter to eradicate the infection. Prompt identification and treatment of peritonitis are essential to ensure success of a CAPD program. Although with newer techniques, like Y-connector or ultraviolet light system, the rate of peritonitis has declined; however, it has still remained the major complication of the CAPD program.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                bjid
                Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases
                Braz J Infect Dis
                Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases (Salvador )
                1678-4391
                February 2007
                : 11
                : 1
                : 100-105
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Universidad Nacional Federico Villarreal Peru
                [2 ] Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos Peru
                Article
                S1413-86702007000100022
                10.1590/S1413-86702007000100022
                17625736
                644b0e77-5348-4b37-a803-a4c377cf7ab6

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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                SciELO Brazil

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=1413-8670&lng=en
                Categories
                INFECTIOUS DISEASES

                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                Vibrio cholerae,antimicrobial resistance,cholera outbreak

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