Abstract :
The current study aimed to isolate and identify the bacteria associated with burn wounds and investigate the
antimicrobial susceptibility pattern against a group of most commonly prescribed antibiotics. In total, 105 burn
wound swabs were collected from burn patients admitted to the burn unit of Al-Sadr Teaching Hospital in
Misan City, Iraq. The swabs had been cultured on different media; the colonies were diagnosed based on the
phenotypic and culture characteristics. The bacteria were identified through cultural characters and Gram
staining diagnosed by VITEK® 2 Compact Automated Systems. In total, there were nine distinct bacterial
isolations, of which, Pseudomonas aeruginosa was the most common pathogen [20%] followed by
Staphylococcus aureus [17.14%], Enterobacter spp.[16.19%], Proteus vulgaris [13.33%], Proteus mirabilis
[10.47%], Escherichia coli [7.6%], Klebsiella pneumoniae [6.6%], and at last, Staphylococcus lentus and
Aeromonas sobria, which had the same percentage [4.7%].Most isolates showed high resistance to Tobramycin,
Trimethoprim, Cephalothin, and Imipenem while isolates mostly had high susceptibility to Amikacin,
Cefotaxime, and Ciprofloxacin. Wound burn infection still represents a serious problem for burn patients with
many bacteria developing different degrees of resistance to most known antibiotics.
Keywords :
Susceptibility , Pseudomonas aeruginosa , Burn wounds , Antibiotics resistance