Affiliation:
1. Institute of Veterinary Bacteriology
2. Equine Clinic
3. Department of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Berne, CH-3001 Bern, Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Because of the frequency of multiple antibiotic resistance,
Staphylococcus
species often represent a challenge in incisional infections of horses undergoing colic surgery. To investigate the evolution of antibiotic resistance patterns before and after preventative peri- and postoperative penicillin treatment, staphylococci were isolated from skin and wound samples at different times during hospitalization. Most staphylococci were normal skin commensals and belonged to the common coagulase-negative group. In some cases they turned out to be opportunistic pathogens present in wound infections. MICs were determined for 12 antibiotics, and antibiotic resistance genes were detected by microarray. At hospital admission, horses harbored staphylococci that were susceptible to antibiotics or resistant to one group of drugs, mainly due to the presence of new variants of the methicillin and macrolide resistance genes
mecA
and
mph
(C), respectively. After 3 days, the percentage of
Staphylococcus
isolates displaying antibiotic resistance, as well as the number of resistance genes per isolate, increased moderately in hospitalized horses without surgery or penicillin treatment but dramatically in hospitalized horses after colic surgery as well as penicillin treatment.
Staphylococcus
species displaying multiple resistance were found to harbor mainly genes conferring resistance to β-lactams (
mecA
and
blaZ
), aminoglycosides [
str
and
aac(6
′
)-Ie-aph(2
′
)-Ia
], and trimethoprim [
dfr
(A) and
dfr
(D)]. Additional genes conferring resistance to macrolides [
mph
(C),
erm
(C), and
erm
(B)], tetracycline [
tet
(K) and
tet
(M)], chloramphenicol [
cat
(pC221) and
cat
(pC223)], and streptothricin (
sat4
) appeared in several strains. Hospitalization and preventive penicillin use were shown to act as selection agents for multidrug-resistant commensal staphylococcal flora.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
157 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献