شماره ركورد :
1255911
عنوان مقاله :
ارتباط باكتري هاي بيماري زا جدا شده از نمونه هاي خلط با سن، جنس، تغييرات فصلي و تعيين الگوي مقاومت آنتي بيوتيكي آنها
عنوان به زبان ديگر :
Correlation of the Pathogenic Bacteria Isolated from Sputum Samples with Age, Sex, Seasonal Variation and Determination of Their Antibiotic Resistance Pattern
پديد آورندگان :
Tasnia ، Ahmed Department of Microbiology - Stamford University Bangladesh , Tanjina ، Islam Department of Microbiology - Stamford University Bangladesh , Raquiba ، Sultana Soha Department of Microbiology - Stamford University Bangladesh , Eiva ، Akter Department of Microbiology - Stamford University Bangladesh
تعداد صفحه :
8
از صفحه :
700
از صفحه (ادامه) :
0
تا صفحه :
707
تا صفحه(ادامه) :
0
كليدواژه :
Respiratory tract infections , Gender , Bacterial infection , Antibiotic resistance , Age , باكتري هاي بيماري زا , نمونه هاي خلط , سن و جنس , مقاومت آنتي بيوتيكي
چكيده فارسي :
فاقد چكيده فارسي است.
چكيده لاتين :
In the current study, the relevance of the respiratory infection with the age, sex, and seasonal variation of the year were studied side by side with the determination of the responsible bacterial pathogen and their antibiotic sensitivity patterns. Materials and Methods One hundred sputum samples were collected to determine the causative bacteria of respiratory distress. An antibiotic susceptibility test was done to determine the susceptibility pattern of the isolates. Results & Conclusion The study found six distinct bacteria causing respiratory infections (Pseudomonas spp., Klebsiella spp., Acinetobacter spp., Enterobacter spp. Escherichia coli, and Serratia spp.). Out of 100 isolates, 21 isolates were susceptible to all of the fourteen antibiotics used in the study, and 4 isolates were completely resistant towards all of the antibiotics which were used in the study. The choice of antibiotic was based on the most prescribed medicines given by the doctors of Bangladesh.
سال انتشار :
1400
عنوان نشريه :
ميكروب شناسي پزشكي ايران
فايل PDF :
8501091
لينک به اين مدرک :
بازگشت