Journal of Applied Biosciences (J. Appl. Biosci.) [ISSN 1997 - 5902]
Volume 22: 1320 - 1325. Published October 7, 2009.
Isolation and antimicrobial susceptibility testing of Escherichia coli causing urinary tract infections
Kebira,*^ A.N., Ochola,** P. and Khamadi,*** S.A.l
*Department of Medical Microbiology, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, P.O. Box 62000-00200 Nairobi, Kenya; **Mombasa Polytechnic University College, P.O. Box 90420 Mombasa; 3Center for Virus Research, Kenya Medical Research Institute, P.O. Box 84540 - 00100 Nairobi, Kenya.
^Corresponding author email: akibera2000@yahoo.com or akibera2000@gmail.com
ABSTRACT
Objectives: Escherichia coli is the greatest cause of primary urinary tract infections (UTI). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing provides information that allows physicians to select the most appropriate antimicrobial agents for treating a specific infection. This study aimed to assess the current status of multidrug resistance among urinary Escherichia coli isolates in Kenya.
Methodology and results: A total of 3,341 urine samples were collected from in and out-patients attending Thika district hospital in Kenya between January and December 2008. The samples were cultured on Cystein lysine electrolytes deficiency (CLED) media and the bacterial isolates recovered were tested against Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, Cefuroxime, Augmentin®, Nitrofurantoin, Nalidixic acid, Gentamycin, Cephaloxin, Norfloxacin, Ciproxin®, Ceftazidime, Amikacin, Ofloxacin, Centriaxone, Perfloxacin, Ticarcillin, Pipril and Roceph using Kirby Bauer disc diffusion technique. Among the 3,341 samples examined, 24% had Escherichia coli isolates with 64% of them being from female patients compared to 36% that were from men aged above 21 years. In children aged >10yrs, boys had the highest prevalence (55%) compared to girls (45%). Those in age categories <21yrs had the more isolates (73%) followed by 5-10yrs (46%), 1-4yrs (16%), and the least 11-20yrs (5%). Upto 75% of the isolates were resistant to Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole; all (100%) were susceptible to Ticarcillin, Peril/Tazo, Amikacin, Ofloxacin and Roceph; and 80% of the isolates were susceptible to Cephalexin, Ceftriaxime, Nalidixic acid, Gentamycin, Norfloxacin, Ciproxin®, Ceftazidime/fortum and Centraixone.
Conclusion and application of findings: Considering the relatively high rates of UTI and drug resistance observed in this study, continued local, regional, and national surveillance is warranted. Antibiotics should only be issued when prescribed by physicians.
Key words: Urinary tract infection, drug resistance, Escherichia coli
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