Title of article :
Resistance patterns of bacterial isolates to antimicrobials from 3 hospitals in the United Arab Emirates
Author/Authors :
Al-Dhaheri, Ahmed S. United Arab Emirates University - Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences - Department of Pharmacology, United Arab Emirates , Al-Niyadi, Mohammed S. United Arab Emirates University - Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences - Department of Pharmacology, United ArabEmirates , Al-Dhaheri, Ahmed D. United Arab Emirates University - Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences - Department of Pharmacology, United Arab Emirates , Bastaki, Salim M. United Arab Emirates University - Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences - Department of Pharmacology, United Arab Emirates
From page :
618
To page :
623
Abstract :
Objectives: To compare the resistance pattern of common bacterial pathogens to commonly used drugs. Methods: Information and statistics of antimicrobial resistance for 1994 and 2005 were collected from the 3 hospital microbiology laboratories in the United Arab Emirates. The resistance patterns of Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella spp, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa to several front-line drugs were estimated. All laboratories used automatic machines (Vitek 2), which identifies and determines minimum inhibitory concentrations simultaneously. Results: Increased resistance was observed for Staphylococcus aureus, (n=315, 2005) to erythromycin (approximately 6 fold, Al-Ain Hospital only), cloxacillin (Al-Ain Hospital), and gentamicin (more than 3-10 folds in all hospitals). Increased penicillin resistance was not observed. For the common Gram-negative organisms, there was a high resistance to ampicillin, gentamicin, ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin, and imipenem, which seemed to increase for Escherichia coli, (by 4.2-200%, n=305, 2005); however, there was very little resistance to imipenem (0.4%) in Tawam Hospital. Variable resistance patterns were obtained for Pseudomonas aeruginosa (n=316, 2005) and Klebsiella spp,(n=316, 2005) against aminoglycosides, cephalosporins, ciprofloxacin, and norfloxacin. Conclusion: Overall, there was an obvious increase in resistance of bacteria and the prevalence rate to a number of drugs from 1-120 folds during the 11-year period
Journal title :
Saudi Medical Journal
Journal title :
Saudi Medical Journal
Record number :
2680717
Link To Document :
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