Title of article :
Spore Production of Toxigenic and Non-Toxigenic Clostridium difficile Isolates in Sub-MIC of Vancomycin, Clindamycin, and Ceftazidime
Author/Authors :
rezazadeh zarandi, ebrahim Immunology of Infectious Diseases Research Center - Research Institute of Basic Medical Sciences - Rafsanjan University of Medical Sciences , mansouri, shahla Department of Microbiology and Virology - Faculty of Medicine - Kerman University of Medical Sciences , nakhaee, nouzar Department of Community Medicine - Faculty of Medicine - Kerman University of Medical Sciences , sarafzadeh, farhad Department of Infectious Diseases - Afzalipour Hospital - Kerman University of Medical Sciences , moradi, mohammad Department of Microbiology and Virology - Faculty of Medicine - Kerman University of Medical Sciences
Abstract :
background: the non-toxigenic variant of clostridium difficile is prevalent in clinical samples. the reason for the high prevalence of these strains in the clinical diarrhea specimens has not yet been studied. objectives: evaluation of spore production in nontoxigenic c. difficile isolates (a-/b-/cdt-) compared to toxigenic isolates (a+/b+/cdt-) in the absence and presence of antibiotics. methods: minimum inhibitory concentration (mic) for bacteria was performed by the microdilution technique. about ~10^6 bacteria from 18hour culture were inoculated to prereduced media containing 1/2× mic of vancomycin (van), clindamycin (cli) and ceftazidime (caz). after 24, 48, and 96 hours, one milliliter of broth culture was added and heated for killing vegetative forms. one hundred microliters of appropriate dilution were cultured on columbia blood agar in triplicate. after 72 hours, the number of viable spores was counted based on the colony forming unit. results: the result showed the spore production of nontoxigenic c. difficile isolates in free antibiotic media and 1/2× mic of antibiotics was similar to toxigenic isolates. the van, cli, and caz inhibited spore production in nontoxigenic isolates as much as toxigenic isolates of c. difficile. conclusions: it seems the nontoxigenic c. difficile isolates are able to produce spores in the absence and presence of antibiotic in a similar manner to toxigenic isolates. generally, their ability to produce toxin is lost, but they are able to remain, sporulate, and survive in hospitalized patients who receive antibiotics.
Keywords :
Clostridium difficile , Antibiotics , Spore Production
Journal title :
Jundishapur Journal of Microbiology (JJM)