Affiliation:
1. Division of Clinical Microbiology, Saskatoon District Health and St Paul’s Hospital (Grey Nuns) and the Department of Pathology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Abstract
Abstract
The susceptibility of Canadian isolates of three respiratory tract pathogens (Haemophilus influenzae,Moraxella catarrhalis and Streptococcus pneumoniae) to several antimicrobial agents were tested by two different methods. β-Lactamase was produced by 68/211 (32.2%) of H. influenzae isolates and 64/75 (85.3%) of M. catarrhalis isolates. For S. pneumoniae, 19/156 (12.2%) isolates were resistant to penicillin (MIC ≥0.12 mg/L) and two isolates had MICs of 1.5 mg/L. For some combinations of agents and organisms, different methods gave different values for the proportion of isolates susceptible. Regardless of methodology, for H. influenzae, the most active antimicrobials based on proportion of strains susceptible were ciprofloxacin (100%) and cefpodoxime (98.5- 100%). For M. catarrhalis, the most active agents were azithromycin, cefaclor, cefixime, cefpodoxime, cefuroxime, ciprofloxacin, clarithromycin and loracarbef (100% each); the least active was ampicillin. Against penicillin-sensitive and -resistant pneumococci, the activity was not significantly different for azithromycin and clarithromycin (93.4- 100%) and ciprofloxacin (MIC 90 2.0 and 1.5 mg/L, respectively) but was different for cefuroxime (99.3% and 31.6%, respectively), cefaclor (MIC 90 0.75 and ≥256 mg/L, respectively), cefpodoxime (MIC 90 0.047 and 1.5 mg/L, respectively) and loracarbef (MIC 90 0.75 and ≥256 mg/L, respectively). This study indicates the increasing incidence, in Canada, of β-lactamase resistance in H. influenzae and M. catarrhalis and penicillin resistance in S. pneumoniae.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology,Microbiology (medical)
Cited by
24 articles.
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