Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/24571
Title: PULSED-FIELD GEL ELECTROPHORESIS USED FOR TYPING OF EXTENDED-SPECTRUM-β-LACTAMASES- PRODUCING ESCHERICHIA COLI ISOLATED FROM INFANT ҆ S RESPIRATORY AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
Authors: Popova, Gorica
Jankuloski, Dean 
Felix, Benjamin
Boskovska, Katerina 
Stojanovska - Dimzovska, Biljana
Tasic, Velibor 
Blagoevska, Katerina 
Keywords: ESBL-producing Escherichia coli
resistance profile
GUT colonization
PFGE- typing
Issue Date: 15-Oct-2018
Publisher: Faculty of Veterinary Medicine-Skopje
Journal: Macedonian Veterinary Review
Abstract: Escherichia coli infections are becoming increasingly difficult to treat because of emerging antimicrobial resistance, mostly to expanded-spectrum cephalosporins, due to the production of extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs).Despite extensive studies of ESBL- producing E.coli in adult patients, there is a lack of information about the epidemiology and spread of ESBL organisms in pediatric population. The aim of this study was to examine the gastrointestinal tract as an endogenous reservoir for the respiratory tract colonization with ESBL- E. coli in children, hospitalized because of the severity of the respiratory illness. The study group consists of 40 children with ESBL-producing E. coli strains isolated from the sputum and from the rectal samples. A control group of 15 E. coli isolated from rectal swabs of healthy children were included in the analysis. The comparison of the strains was done by using antimicrobial susceptibility patterns of the stains, and pulsed field gel electrophoresis was performed for molecular typing, using XbaI digestion. 90% of the compared pairs of strains in the study group were with identical antimicrobial susceptibility patterns and indistinguishable in 79.2% by the obtained PFGE – profiles.33.3% (5/15) of confirmed E. coli strains from the control group were found to be ESBL – producers. Resulting band profiles of all isolates demonstrated presence of 12 pulsotypes, with 100% similarity within the pulsotypes. Although, some isolates obtained from different patients were genetically indistinguishable, these strains were not hospital acquired, as none of the patients satisfied the criteria for hospital acquired pneumonia, and there was a lack of an obvious transmission chain. All ESBL –E. coli isolated from sputum in clinical cases were obtained from patients under the age of one. According to the resistance profile of the compared pairs and the PFGE comparison of all isolates, it can be concluded that the gastrointestinal tract is the main reservoir of ESBL-E. coli. Small age in infants is a risk factor for translocation of bacteria, enabling the colonization of the respiratory tract.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/24571
DOI: 10.2478/macvetrev-2018-0016
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Medicine: Journal Articles

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