Incidence of drug resistance bacterial isolates from different Pyoderma cases attending at tertiary care hospital of Central Nepal

Authors

  • Surya Narayan Mahaseth Assistant professor, Department of Microbiology, Janaki Medical College, Janakpur, Nepal
  • Rawet Ranjan Kumar Thakur Assistant professor, Department of Microbiology, Janaki Medical College, Janakpur, Nepal
  • Khushbu Yadav Assistant professor, Department of Microbiology, Janaki Medical College, Janakpur, Nepal
  • Brajesh Jha Associate professor, Department of Microbiology, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Chitwan, Nepal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/jmcjms.v12i01.65236

Keywords:

Bacterial isolates, drug resistance, pyoderma

Abstract

Background & Objectives: Pyoderma is defined as any purulent skin disease and represents infections in epidermis and dermis including hair follicles. Thus, this study was conducted to find out incidence and bacteriological profile of pyodermas as well as to determine their antibiotic susceptibility test of isolated bacteria.

Materials and Methods: The samples were collected in dermatological OPD and sent the collected samples immediately to bacteriology laboratory for culture and sensitivity tests from December 2018 to May 2019 A.D. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was done using Kirby–Bauer disc diffusion method and the results were interpreted according to the CLSI guidelines. Quality control of the test was done by standard ATCC strains of S.aureus (ATCC 25923), E.coli (ATCC 25922).

Results: The incidence of pyoderma was 3.24%. Maximum cases were detected in the age group below 13 years of age. Primary pyoderma (61.8%) was more frequent when compared to secondary pyoderma (38.2%). The highest number of organism isolated was S. aureus (24.7%) from different cases of pyoderma followed by E. coli (8.2%), CONS (6.1%) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (5.1%) whereas other organisms were found in less number. Gram positive bacteria mainly S. aureus and other isolates for the cause of pyoderma were mostly resistant to penicillin (100%), ciprofloxacillin (75.0%) and clindamycin (79.2%). Gram negative E. coli (8.2%) was second most bacterial isolates and others GNB isolates were (14/63) where resistance pattern were seen more (75.0%) in each ceftrixone and imipenem.

Conclusion: Incidence of pyoderma was low among the patients visiting to the Dermatology Department. Antibiotic resistance is increasing day by day; therefore, routine culture and sensitivity tests are essential to guide proper treatment procedure.

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Published

2024-04-29

How to Cite

Mahaseth, S. N., Thakur, R. R. K., Yadav, K., & Jha, B. (2024). Incidence of drug resistance bacterial isolates from different Pyoderma cases attending at tertiary care hospital of Central Nepal. Janaki Medical College Journal of Medical Science, 12(01), 22–31. https://doi.org/10.3126/jmcjms.v12i01.65236

Issue

Section

Research Articles