Nalidixic acid resistance in Salmonella strains with decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin isolated from humans in Turkey.

Serpil Ercis, Birsel Erdem, Gülşen Hasçelik, Deniz Gür
Author Information
  1. Serpil Ercis: Department of Microbiology and Clinical Microbiology, Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey. sercis@hacettepe.edu.tr

Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the value of nalidixic acid resistance as an indicator of decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin (MIC = 0.125 - 1 mg/L) in Salmonella isolates from humans (n = 620) in Turkey. One isolate was found to be resistant, and the remaining isolates were susceptible to ciprofloxacin with the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute breakpoints; however, 75 isolates (12.1%) had decreased susceptibility. Resistance to nalidixic acid was observed in 76 (12.3%) isolates in the disk diffusion test. Seventy-four of these isolates had decreased susceptibility, one was fully resistant, and one isolate was susceptible to ciprofloxacin. One isolate with decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin was intermediate to nalidixic acid. Screening with 30-microg nalidixic acid disks had a sensitivity of 98.6% and a specificity of 99.8% for determination of decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin.

MeSH Term

Anti-Bacterial Agents
Ciprofloxacin
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Drug Resistance, Bacterial
Humans
Microbial Sensitivity Tests
Nalidixic Acid
Salmonella
Sensitivity and Specificity
Serotyping
Treatment Outcome
Turkey

Chemicals

Anti-Bacterial Agents
Nalidixic Acid
Ciprofloxacin

Word Cloud

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