Antibiogram of bacterial isolates obtained from infants and children at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH).

The gradual increase in antimicrobial resistance in children is a major challenge in the field of hospital epidemiology and medical microbiology. This study was conducted to investigate the susceptibility pattern of commonly used antimicrobial agents against bacterial isolates in children attending...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Emmanuel Onyekachukwu Ibeneme , Zenoh Danjuma Ali * , Glory Philemon Bebia , Joy Chinweokwu Ezema , JosephusBoniface.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hammer Head Production Limited 2022-11-01
Series:Sokoto Journal of Medical Laboratory Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sokjmls.com.ng/index.php/SJMLS/article/view/52
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850056515827793920
author Emmanuel Onyekachukwu Ibeneme , Zenoh Danjuma Ali * , Glory Philemon Bebia , Joy Chinweokwu Ezema , JosephusBoniface.
author_facet Emmanuel Onyekachukwu Ibeneme , Zenoh Danjuma Ali * , Glory Philemon Bebia , Joy Chinweokwu Ezema , JosephusBoniface.
author_sort Emmanuel Onyekachukwu Ibeneme , Zenoh Danjuma Ali * , Glory Philemon Bebia , Joy Chinweokwu Ezema , JosephusBoniface.
collection DOAJ
description The gradual increase in antimicrobial resistance in children is a major challenge in the field of hospital epidemiology and medical microbiology. This study was conducted to investigate the susceptibility pattern of commonly used antimicrobial agents against bacterial isolates in children attending UCTH. Fifty clinical specimens; blood, urine, eye, ear and wound swap were collected from infants and children 1-day old to 9 years. About 2mL of the blood was dispensed into Brain Heart infusion broth (10ml) contained in a Bijou bottle and incubated for 2 days at 37°C. Midstream urine samples were collected into sterile universal containers and cultured on blood and CLED agar using the Leigh and Williams paper strip method, while sterile swab-stick was used to collect ear and eye specimen (discharge). The ear specimens were cultured on CLED and blood agar while the eye swap on CLED and chocolate agar. Isolates susceptibility was tested on gentamicin, erythromycin, Zithromax, ampicillin, amoxicillin and penicillin using disc diffusion method by Kirby-Bauer. Of the 50 subjects examined, a total of 39 bacterial isolates were obtained from the 36(72%) culture positive samples. S. aureus was the most isolated 22(56.4%), followed by P. aeruginosa 7(17.9%), Streptococci, Coliform, and Proteus were 3(7.7%), 6(15.4%) and 1(2.6%) respectively. Female children had more bacterial isolates 19(73.1%) compared to male 17(70.1%). The isolates were more sensitive to gentamicin 25(64%), followed by zithromax 23(59%), erythromycin 16(41%) and ampicillin 12(31%). The isolates were less sensitive to Penicillin 2(5) and Amoxicillin 10(26), multi resistance was seen in 14(35.9%) of the isolates. Resistance to antibiotics is on the rise and babies are particularly at increased risk because of lower immunity. The study recommends the need for the development of alternative therapy.
format Article
id doaj-art-1d345dbd96c140bc9dea2f88d2429752
institution DOAJ
issn 2536-7153
language English
publishDate 2022-11-01
publisher Hammer Head Production Limited
record_format Article
series Sokoto Journal of Medical Laboratory Science
spelling doaj-art-1d345dbd96c140bc9dea2f88d24297522025-08-20T02:51:41ZengHammer Head Production LimitedSokoto Journal of Medical Laboratory Science2536-71532022-11-017352Antibiogram of bacterial isolates obtained from infants and children at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH).Emmanuel Onyekachukwu Ibeneme , Zenoh Danjuma Ali * , Glory Philemon Bebia , Joy Chinweokwu Ezema , JosephusBoniface.The gradual increase in antimicrobial resistance in children is a major challenge in the field of hospital epidemiology and medical microbiology. This study was conducted to investigate the susceptibility pattern of commonly used antimicrobial agents against bacterial isolates in children attending UCTH. Fifty clinical specimens; blood, urine, eye, ear and wound swap were collected from infants and children 1-day old to 9 years. About 2mL of the blood was dispensed into Brain Heart infusion broth (10ml) contained in a Bijou bottle and incubated for 2 days at 37°C. Midstream urine samples were collected into sterile universal containers and cultured on blood and CLED agar using the Leigh and Williams paper strip method, while sterile swab-stick was used to collect ear and eye specimen (discharge). The ear specimens were cultured on CLED and blood agar while the eye swap on CLED and chocolate agar. Isolates susceptibility was tested on gentamicin, erythromycin, Zithromax, ampicillin, amoxicillin and penicillin using disc diffusion method by Kirby-Bauer. Of the 50 subjects examined, a total of 39 bacterial isolates were obtained from the 36(72%) culture positive samples. S. aureus was the most isolated 22(56.4%), followed by P. aeruginosa 7(17.9%), Streptococci, Coliform, and Proteus were 3(7.7%), 6(15.4%) and 1(2.6%) respectively. Female children had more bacterial isolates 19(73.1%) compared to male 17(70.1%). The isolates were more sensitive to gentamicin 25(64%), followed by zithromax 23(59%), erythromycin 16(41%) and ampicillin 12(31%). The isolates were less sensitive to Penicillin 2(5) and Amoxicillin 10(26), multi resistance was seen in 14(35.9%) of the isolates. Resistance to antibiotics is on the rise and babies are particularly at increased risk because of lower immunity. The study recommends the need for the development of alternative therapy.https://sokjmls.com.ng/index.php/SJMLS/article/view/52infection; bacterial isolates; neonates; antibacterial; resistance; sensitive
spellingShingle Emmanuel Onyekachukwu Ibeneme , Zenoh Danjuma Ali * , Glory Philemon Bebia , Joy Chinweokwu Ezema , JosephusBoniface.
Antibiogram of bacterial isolates obtained from infants and children at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH).
Sokoto Journal of Medical Laboratory Science
infection; bacterial isolates; neonates; antibacterial; resistance; sensitive
title Antibiogram of bacterial isolates obtained from infants and children at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH).
title_full Antibiogram of bacterial isolates obtained from infants and children at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH).
title_fullStr Antibiogram of bacterial isolates obtained from infants and children at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH).
title_full_unstemmed Antibiogram of bacterial isolates obtained from infants and children at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH).
title_short Antibiogram of bacterial isolates obtained from infants and children at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH).
title_sort antibiogram of bacterial isolates obtained from infants and children at the university of calabar teaching hospital ucth
topic infection; bacterial isolates; neonates; antibacterial; resistance; sensitive
url https://sokjmls.com.ng/index.php/SJMLS/article/view/52
work_keys_str_mv AT emmanuelonyekachukwuibenemezenohdanjumaaligloryphilemonbebiajoychinweokwuezemajosephusboniface antibiogramofbacterialisolatesobtainedfrominfantsandchildrenattheuniversityofcalabarteachinghospitalucth