| Literature DB >> 3511977 |
D M Poisson, J C Borderon, J C Amorim-Sena, J Laugier.
Abstract
60 neonates--42 newborns 0-30 days old and 18 infants 31-90 days old--without previous antibiotic treatment were chosen and randomized into three groups (A, B, C). The strain of Escherichia coli administered was antibiotic-sensitive and azide-resistant (E. coli AZ). The digestive implantation was quantified by an index. We studied the variations of this index between the single administration group (A) and the 5 administrations group (B) and with age in both groups. Drug-resistant enterobacteria were also numbered in each stool, and their variations were studied by comparing groups A and B to a control group (C) receiving no administration. Multiple administrations did not lead to different results from the single ones. Age played a negative role in the colonizations after single administration, but a positive one after multiple administrations. Drug-resistant enterobacteria were not affected by any procedure. The drug susceptibility of E. coli AZ was lost in only 1 infant.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3511977 DOI: 10.1159/000242502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Neonate ISSN: 0006-3126