| Literature DB >> 26313150 |
Djim-Adjim Tabo1, Sophie A Granier2, Colette D Diguimbaye3, Muriel Marault2, Anne Brisabois2, Baïzina Mama3, Yves Millemann4.
Abstract
Salmonella is considered to be one of the main pathogens causing human gastroenteritis worldwide. Looking for Salmonella in Africa in patients suffering from gastroenteritis is rather unusual, and the use of antibiotics is not subject to any regulation. This study intends for stressing the possible prominent importance of Salmonella in digestive diseases in Africa as well as identifying antimicrobial resistance of Salmonella isolates from faeces samples of human origin. All samples were collected from five N'Djamena hospitals, from patients suffering from diarrhoea. The collecting was undertaken over two periods of six months each: from August 2010 to January 2011 and from September 2011 to February 2012. Salmonella isolates were obtained by standard cultivation and serotyping methods. A total of 43 Salmonella isolates were identified, belonging to 21 different serovars. The most prevalent serovar was Salmonella Stanleyville (n = 7), followed by S. Anatum (n = 4) and S. Kottbus (n = 3). The other serovars were under-represented. The majority of these isolates were susceptible to all antibiotics tested (CLSI Standards), except two S. Enteritidis isolates that exhibited resistance to fluoroquinolones. The different serovars and antibiotic resistance profiles that were observed highlight the substantial diversity of Salmonella in N'Djamena, Chad. Roughly, one out of ten patients who consulted for gastroenteritis was shedding Salmonella spp. and none of them would have been diagnosed outside the context of this research program. This study may encourage local clinicians to explore more often salmonellosis suspicion in their daily practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26313150 PMCID: PMC4552384 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0136153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Prevalence of Salmonella strains isolated in 5 N’Djamena hospitals, Chad.
| Hospitals | Number of human faeces samples (n = 420) | |
|---|---|---|
| Examined | Positive (%, [95%CI]) | |
| Hosp 1 | 90 | 6 (7%, [1.5–11.8]) |
| Hosp 2 | 90 | 4 (4%, [0.2–8.7]) |
| Hosp 3 | 90 | 1 (1%, [0–3.3]) |
| Hosp 4 | 60 | 11 (18%, [8.5–28.1]) |
| Hosp 5 | 90 | 17 (19%, [10.8–27.0]) |
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Distribution and antimicrobial susceptibility profiles of Salmonella serovars isolated from 5 N’Djamena hospitals, Chad.
| Hospitals Isolates per hospital | Serovars | Isolates sources by Gender/age of patients | Number of patients per serovar | Antimicrobial Resistance profiles |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| F/17ys, M/48ys, F/50ys, F/20ys | 4 | Pan-susceptible |
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| M/20ys, F/5ys, | 2 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/34ys | 3 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/6ys, M/16ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/38ys, F/20ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/32ys, M/52ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| F/12ys | 1 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/59ys, M/22ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/34ys | 1 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/32ys, F/66ys, F/32ys, F/15ys | 4 | Pan-susceptible |
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| F/23ys, F/16ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| F/14ys, M/1ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/23ys, M/15ys | 2 | NAL, OFX, CIP | |
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| M/30ys | 1 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/30ys | 1 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| F/2ys, F/50ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible |
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| M/24ys, F/22ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| F/12ys | 1 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| F/31ys | 1 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| M/54ys, F/14ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible |
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| M/45ys, F/6ys | 2 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| F/14ys | 1 | Pan-susceptible | |
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| F/2ys | 1 | Pan-susceptible |
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ys: years; M: male; F: female;
a, b, c, d: patient followed by the same superscript letter = same patient; Pan-susceptible means susceptible to all antimicrobials tested; NAL: nalidixic acid, OFX: ofloxacin, CIP: ciprofloxacin