Home Project-material PREVALENCE AND ANTIMICROBIAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF GRAM NEGATIVE BACTERIA IN THE URINE OF CARITAS UNIVERSITY STUDENTS

PREVALENCE AND ANTIMICROBIAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF GRAM NEGATIVE BACTERIA IN THE URINE OF CARITAS UNIVERSITY STUDENTS

Dept: MICROBIOLOGY File: Word(doc) Chapters: 1-5 Views: 7

Abstract

In order to access the prevalence and sensitivity pattern of urinary pathogens, 60 midstream urine samples from students of Caritas University were investigated using cultural methods. Samples were examined microscopically and cultured in blood agar and Macckonkey agar. Disk diffusion method was used for antibiotic testing. Of the 60 urine samples 48 yielded significant growth with a prevalence rate of 80%. It was observed that females were more infected than the males with a prevalence rate of 56.70% and 43.30% respectively under the ages of 18-25yrs. Escherichia coli was the most predominant. The isolates were very sensitive to Gentamycin, Nitrofurantoin and Ofloxacin which were the (most sensitive) and the most resistant were Tetracycline, Cortrimozol, Cephalexin and Ampicillin. Therefore, Nitrofurantoin, Gentamycin, Ofloxacin were strongly recommended for the treatment of UTI as indicated in the study.
INTRODUCTION

Gram negative bacteria are bacteria that do not retain their crystal violet dye in

the gram staining protocol. They are differentiated by their cell wall structure.

The following characteristics are displayed by gram negative bacteria as

follows

Cytoplasmic membrane

Thin peptidoglycan layer(much thinner than gram positive)

Outer membrane containing lipopolysaccharide outside the

peptidoglycan layer

Porin exists in the outer membrane, which acts like pores

There is a space between the layer of peptidoglycan and the secondary

cell membrane, called the periplasmic space

If present, flagella have four (4) supporting rings instead of two

No techoic acid or lipopolysaccharide

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Some examples of gram negative bacteria include; Escherichia coli,

Salmonella species, Pseudomonas species, Klebsiella species, Proteus species,

Helicobacter species, Mosoxella species, Cyanobacteria species, Spirochetes

species.

They also constitute a serious problem in urinary tract infections in many parts

of the world. Appropriate antimicrobial treatments are often critical to

decreasing morbidity and mortality among hospitalized patients having the

infections caused by the pathogens. Gram negative bacteria are non-spore

forming bacilli that grow rapidly on ordinary laboratory media under both

aerobic and anaerobic conditions. It has been estimated that symptomatic

urinary tract infects (UTI) occurs in as many as 7million visits to emergency

units and 100,000 hospitalised annually. UTI has been the most common

hospital acquired infections, accounting for as many as 35% of nosocomial

infection. It is the second most common cause of bacteraemia in hospitalised

patients (Nacem, 2000). UTI is known to occur in all populations but has a

particular impact on females of all ages and males at two extremes of life,

immuno-compromised patients and anyone with function or structural

abnormalities of the urinary and excretory system.

15

UTI is known to be the microbial invasion of any of the tissues of the urinary

tract reaching from the renal cortex to the urethrameatus (Nicolle, 2000). It is

also known to be the presence in two consecutive urine samples of greater than

100rods (105 ) organisms per ml of a single bacterial strain in the urinary tract.

UTI can be categorized in ascending or descending. Infections which are

confined to the urethral or the bladder are ascending and referred to as uretitis

or cystitis respectively. On the other hand, the pathogens spread from one or

other infected body site to the kidney down along the ureter to the bladder.

Such descending UTI cause severe kidney infection, a condition called

pyelonephritis (Parsons, 1958). This is potentially more serious; infections to

the urethra are called urethritis and to the prostrate gland are called prostitis.

This classification is the presence or absence of symptoms, reoccurrence or

absence or presence of complicating factors which are host factors facilitating

establishment and maintenance of bacteraemia or worsening the prognosis of

UTI`s engaging the kidney.

Majority of pathogens are gram negative species with predominance of

members of Enterobacteriace (Neu, 1992). Escherichia coli accounts for

majority of urinary tract infections in young women but other gram negative

16

rods of different genera such as proteus species and pseudomonas aeruginosa

an aerobic gram negative rod is also troublesome. As a urinary tract pathogens

because of its resistance to antimicrobial medicine make it difficult to treat

successfully (Nester et al. 1998).

Antibiotics are used for the control of bacterial infections in human. Generally,

gram negative bacteria are sensitive to many antimicrobial agents but strains

from different patients and carriers differ in the pattern and degrees of

sensitivity to different drugs. Increasing antimicrobials resistance in bacterial

pathogen is a worldwide concern. The prevalence of antimicrobial resistance

among urinary tract infectious agents is also increasing (Mathai et al. 2001 :

Karaloswsky et al. 2001) and its treatment has become more complicated due

to increasing resistance and empirical therapy leading to treatment failures of

most associated with gram negative bacteria (Blondeau et al. 1999). The

present study investigated the pattern of gram negative uropathogens and their

antimicrobial resistance pattern among the clinical isolates to the commercially

available antibiotics that are often prescribed in urinary tract infectious cases

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1.1 Aims and objectives

To find out the prevalence of gram negative organisms in the urinary

tract among caritas university students.

To investigate their antibiotic sensitivity pattern to enable formulation of

drugs for urinary tract infection in our community.

To determine the age and sex prevalence.

To determine the prevalence of bacterial strains and their antimicrobial

susceptibility in urine.

To find the pathogenic bacteria commonly responsible with UTI and

susceptibility patterns this will help the clinicians to choose the right

empirical treatment



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