1.A report on infection dynamics of inducible clindamycin resistance of Staphylococcus aureus isolated from a teaching hospital in India.
Debasmita DUBEY ; Shakti RATH ; Mahesh C SAHU ; Subhrajita ROUT ; Nagen K DEBATA ; Rabindra N PADHY
Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine 2013;3(2):148-153
OBJECTIVETo investigate the infection of hospital- and community-acquired "erythromycin-induced clindamycin resistant" strains or D-test positives of clinical isolates of Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) (with and without methicillin resistance) in a hospital.
METHODSStrains of S. aureus isolated from clinical specimens were subjected to D-test and antibiotic profiling.
RESULTSOf the total 278 isolates, 140 (50.35%) were D-test positives and the rest were D-test negatives. Further, of 140 (100%) positives, 87 (62.14%) and 53 (37.85%) strains were from males and females, respectively. Of 140 (100%) positives, 117 (83.57%) were methicillin resistant S. aureus and 23 (16.42%) were methicillin sensitive S. aureus; of 140 strains, 103 (73.57%) strains from persons with and 37 (26.42%) were without related infections; of 140 strains, 91 (65%) and 49 (35%) were from hospital- and community-acquired samples, respectively. In 140 strains, 118 (84.28%) with comorbidities and 22 (15.71%) without comorbidities cases were recorded; similarly, persons with prior antibiotic uses contributed 108 (77.14%) and without 32 (22.85%) positive strains. These binary data of surveillance were analyzed by a univariate analysis. It was evident that the prior antibiotic uses and comorbidities due to other ailments were the determinative factors in D-test positivity, corroborated by low P values, P=0.001 1 and 0.002 4, respectively. All isolates (278) were resistant to 17 antibiotics of nine groups, in varying degrees; the minimum of 28% resistance for vancomycin and the maximum of 97% resistance for gentamicin were recorded. Further, of 278 strains, only 42 (15.1%) strains were resistant constitutively to both antibiotics, erythromycin resistant and clindamycin resistant, while 45 (16.2%) strains were constitutively sensitive to both antibiotics (erythromycin sensitive and clindamycin sensitive). Further, of the rest 191 (68.7%) strains were with erythromycin resistant and clindamycin resistant, of which only 140 (50.35%) strains were D-test positives, while the rest 51 (18.34%) strains were D-test negatives.
CONCLUSIONSIn view of high prevalence of D-test positive S. aureus strains, and equally high prevalence of multidrug resistant strains both in community and hospital sectors, undertaking of D-test may be routinely conducted for suppurative infections.
Anti-Bacterial Agents ; pharmacology ; Clindamycin ; pharmacology ; Community-Acquired Infections ; epidemiology ; microbiology ; Cross Infection ; epidemiology ; microbiology ; Drug Resistance, Bacterial ; Erythromycin ; pharmacology ; Female ; Hospitals, Teaching ; Humans ; India ; epidemiology ; Male ; Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ; drug effects ; Staphylococcal Infections ; epidemiology ; microbiology ; Staphylococcus aureus ; drug effects ; isolation & purification
2.Corrigendum to “Statistical Evaluation of Two Microbiological Diagnostic Methods of Pulmonary Tuberculosis After Implementation of a Directly Observed Treatment Short-course Program” Osong Public Health Res Perspect 2013;4(1):45–51
Shakti RATH ; Debasmita DUBEY ; Mahesh C SAHU ; Sudhanshu S MISHRA ; Rabindra N PADHY
Osong Public Health and Research Perspectives 2019;10(3):202-202
In the above-mentioned article, the authors want to update the source of Figure 1 both in Figure legend and in the Reference section, which was missing the original article.