| Literature DB >> 21151656 |
Scott D Fitzgerald1, Angie M Schooley, Dale E Berry, John B Kaneene.
Abstract
Michigan has had an ongoing outbreak of endemic Mycobacterium bovis which has been recognized within and sustained by its free-ranging white-tailed deer population since 1994. Worldwide, organisms within the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex have exhibited the ability to develop resistance to antimicrobial agents, resulting in both the multidrug-resistant (MDR) and extensively drug-resistant (XDR) strains of human tuberculosis. Michigan's Bovine Tuberculosis Working Group has conducted active antimicrobial susceptibility testing on wildlife isolates of the endemic M. bovis organism at five-year intervals to detect any emerging drug resistance patterns. The results of 33 white-tailed deer origin isolates collected from the 2009 hunting season are reported here. There continues to be no evidence of any drug resistance except for pyrazinamide resistance. These results are likely due to the lack of antibacterial treatment applied to either wildlife or domestic animals which would provide selection pressure for the development of drug resistance.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21151656 PMCID: PMC2997342 DOI: 10.4061/2011/903683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Med Int ISSN: 2042-0048
Antimicrobial susceptibility results for Michigan deer from 2009.
| Host Species | Bactec method | Bactec PZA1 method | Proportion method | Proportion method PZA1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deer | 0/332 | 33/332 | 0/332 | 33/332 |
1PZA: pyrazinamide
2Number of resistant isolates over the total number of isolates tested.